Session 5: Nutrition communication The challenge of effective food risk communication: Symposium on ‘The challenge of translating nutrition research into public health nutrition’

A chronology of food scares combined with a rapid, unchecked, rise in lifestyle-related diseases such as obesity highlights the need for a focus on effective food risk communication. However, food risk communication is highly complex. Many factors will affect its success, including the demeanour and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Nutrition Society 2009-05, Vol.68 (2), p.135-141
Hauptverfasser: McGloin, Aileen, Delaney, Liam, Hudson, Eibhlin, Wall, Pat
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container_title Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
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creator McGloin, Aileen
Delaney, Liam
Hudson, Eibhlin
Wall, Pat
description A chronology of food scares combined with a rapid, unchecked, rise in lifestyle-related diseases such as obesity highlights the need for a focus on effective food risk communication. However, food risk communication is highly complex. Many factors will affect its success, including the demeanour and conduct of the source, its transparency, interaction with the public, acknowledgement of risks and timely disclosure. How the message is developed is also important in terms of language, style and pretesting with target audiences, as is the choice of appropriate channels for reaching target audiences. Finally, there are many personal factors that may affect risk perception such as previous experience, knowledge, attitudes and beliefs, personality, psychological factors and socio-demographic factors, many of which remain unexplored. While there is evidence that campaigns that communicate health risk have been associated with behaviour change in relation to major public health and safety issues in the past, it is unknown at this stage whether targeting risk information based on risk-perception segmentation can increase the effectiveness of the messages.
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title Session 5: Nutrition communication The challenge of effective food risk communication: Symposium on ‘The challenge of translating nutrition research into public health nutrition’
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