Looking at the other side: Families, public health and anti-vaccination


Autoria(s): English, Rebecca; Nykvist, Shaun
Contribuinte(s)

English, Rebecca

Johns, Raechel

Data(s)

2016

Resumo

The choice to vaccinate or not to vaccinate a child is usually an ‘informed decision’, however, it is how this decision is informed which is of most importance. More frequently, families are turning to the Internet, in particular social media, as a data source to support their decisions. However, much of the online information may be unscientific or biased. While issues such as vaccination will always see dissenting voices, engaging with that ‘other side’ is difficult in the public policy debate which is informed by evidence based science. This chapter investigates the other side in light of the growing adoption and reliance on social media as a source of anti-vaccine information. The study adopts a qualitative approach to data collection and is based on a critical discourse analysis of online social media discourse. The findings demonstrate the valuable contribution this approach can make to public policy work in vaccination.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/94664/

Publicador

Information Science Reference

Relação

DOI:10.4018/978-1-5225-0010-0.ch010

English, Rebecca & Nykvist, Shaun (2016) Looking at the other side: Families, public health and anti-vaccination. In English, Rebecca & Johns, Raechel (Eds.) Gender Considerations in Online Consumption Behavior and Internet Use. Information Science Reference, Hershey PA, pp. 150-160.

Direitos

IGI Global

Fonte

School of Curriculum; Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #111708 Health and Community Services #Anti-Vaccintation #Public Health #Vaccination #Social Media #Public Policy #Discourse Analysis
Tipo

Book Chapter