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American Journal of Public Health, Vol. 89, Issue 10 1555-1560, Copyright © 1999 by American Public Health Association

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Coverage of beverage alcohol issues in the print media in the United States, 1985-1991.

P H Lemmens, P A Vaeth and T K Greenfield

Department of Medical Sociology, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands.

OBJECTIVES: This study assessed the portrayal of alcohol-related issues in the print media in the United States during the 7-year period bracketing implementation of the US alcohol warning label act in November 1988. METHODS: All articles that appeared from 1985 to 1991 in 5 national newspapers and that were indexed as dealing with beverage alcohol were identified. Content analysis of a 15% sample of these articles allowed an in-depth assessment of the conceptualization of alcohol in the US print media. RESULTS: A slight decrease in articles related to alcoholism was offset by an increase in articles about the more general health-related effects of alcohol. The warning label act received little attention. Most articles portrayed alcohol neutrally or negatively, using information from government sources. CONCLUSIONS: Portrayal of alcohol in the US print media has changed in recent decades. A general shift noted as early as the 1960s has increasingly emphasized public health issues and deemphasized clinical aspects of alcoholism. This has been accompanied by a continuing shift away from a biopsychological definition of alcohol-related behavior to a definition stressing external environmental factors.




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A. HANSEN and B. GUNTER
CONSTRUCTING PUBLIC AND POLITICAL DISCOURSE ON ALCOHOL ISSUES: TOWARDS A FRAMEWORK FOR ANALYSIS
Alcohol Alcohol., March 1, 2007; 42(2): 150 - 157.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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