RMIT University
Browse

Entertaining information: Third-party influencers’ role in COVID-safety health communication

Download (400.95 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-23, 22:58 authored by Rob CoverRob Cover, Lukas ParkerLukas Parker, Charlie Young, Ekaterina OstapetsEkaterina Ostapets
This paper discusses findings from a commissioned evaluation of an Australian government COVID-19 health campaign that utilised third-party influencers to increase the reach of health communication messages among culturally and linguistically diverse young people. Although the campaign was successful, interviews with select influencers and target audience members indicated that the ‘serious’ tone of the health messaging was less effective and less likely to be shared and that messages should be more ‘entertaining’. Analyses of data indicated three themes providing insights into how future campaigns may benefit from a focus that draws together health information and entertainment using models already constructed in the entertainment–education field: (1) Entertaining health messages have a stronger fit with influencers who are known for their entertainment value; (2) Entertaining messages are more memorable and more likely to be shared; (3) A balance between entertainment and the signifiers of trust and credibility such as government health authority logos overcomes trust issues in the context of current health disinformation and misinformation.

History

Journal

Media International Australia

Volume

192

Issue

1

Start page

1

End page

15

Total pages

15

Publisher

Sage

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2023

UN Sustainable Development Goals

  • 3 Good Health and Well Being

Open access

  • Yes