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National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

Healthy Youth



 

Promoting Better Health
Strategies

Media Campaigns

Young people today belong to a multimedia generation. The average child spends more than 4 hours a day using electronic media.18 Although this staggering amount of media use poses certain problems, it also creates an opportunity: Young people are a willing audience that can be reached through a variety of media. Communicating to young people through an ongoing, well-designed multimedia campaign can play an important role in increasing their motivation to be physically active.

Strategy 9: Implement an ongoing media campaign to promote physical education as an important component of a quality education and long-term health.

This campaign must take advantage of all that communication and marketing experts have learned about how to develop effective mass media messages. Testing messages for appeal and appropriateness with different groups is essential, as is involving young people in all aspects of campaign planning and implementation. Special efforts should be made to reach out to those population segments in greatest need, including girls and members of racial/ethnic minority groups. Culturally and linguistically appropriate messages should be designed for these groups and delivered through targeted communication channels. Communication to parents, educators, and health care professionals also should be a central part of this campaign.

While the campaign should take advantage of traditional media (e.g., television and radio ads), it should also target the new media (e.g., Internet-based activities) that are so popular with young people. The same integrated communication tactics that are employed by leading marketers (e.g., movie promotion campaigns using ads, news media outreach, events, and appropriate product tie-ins) might be tried. A national media campaign should be integrated with state and local efforts.

The USOC can play a valuable role in this initiative by identifying and coordinating the participation of Olympic and Paralympic athletes in public appearances and advertisements promoting physical fitness. In addition, the PCPFS should work with professional sports leagues to mount a targeted effort to promote quality, daily physical education in our nation’s schools.

 


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This page last updated July 25, 2005

Division of Adolescent and School Health
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Department of Health and Human Services