|
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
• |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Div. of Media Relations
1600 Clifton Road
MS D-14
Atlanta, GA 30333
(404) 639-3286
Fax (404) 639-7394 |
|
|
|
April 2001
Fact Sheet
Sentinel for Health Award for Daytime Drama
WHAT: The Sentinel for Health Award for Daytime Drama has been developed by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to recognize exemplary portrayals of health issues
in daytime drama. It is the first such award to be given by the agency and is part of a larger
Entertainment Education Program that includes research, education and outreach to
entertainment audiences.
WHY: Many of the groups at greatest risk for preventable diseases have characteristics
similar to regular viewers of soap operas who watch at least twice a week. Nearly half of
regular viewers report they learned about a disease or how to prevent it from a soap opera and
one-third took some action as a result (1999 Healthstyles Survey).
WHO: A CDC committee of communication staff from multiple program areas and
representatives from academic, public health, entertainment and advocacy organizations advise
on development of the CDC award activity. The CDC Foundation lends sponsorship support and
Population Communications International (PCI) hosts the Soap Summit conference where the award
is presented.
WHEN: The first award was given on October 14, 2000 at Soap Summit V in Los Angeles.
The ABC soap opera One Life To Live was recognized for the storyline, Viki’s Breast Cancer,
which depicted early detection of breast cancer through mammography. Entries for the 2001
award are due June 30 and a winner will be announced in October.
HOW: Award development, promotion and evaluation activities are coordinated by the CDC
Office of Communication, based in the Office of the Director. The award review process
includes a first round of judging at CDC and a second round of judging outside the agency. CDC
judges are experts in health communication, media relations, health education, behavioral
science and epidemiology. External judges are from academic, advocacy, entertainment and
public health organizations. Related CDC Entertainment-Education Program activities that
support the award activity include:
- Resource Materials: Tip sheets, fact sheets and other materials on priority
health topics are provided to producers and writers who may contact CDC or partner
organizations for expert consultation on entertainment shows. Tip sheets are developed by
CDC program staff to suggest topics and offer resources, such as websites, 800 numbers and
CDC contacts.
- Meetings/Consultations/Briefings: Meetings are held with entertainment
representatives from TV shows, networks, and partner organizations to educate them about
public health topics, offer materials and explore collaborative projects. Expert meetings
and briefings are held with writers and producers to present current data and information
about disease trends, groups at risk and recommended prevention measures.
- Research and Evaluation: Audience research is conducted and databases such as
Healthstyles, PRIZM (Claritas, Inc.) and Nielsen are analyzed for strategic program
development and sharing with entertainment and professional audiences. Evaluation of
program activity is underway, and recommendations from a research agenda-setting
conference held at CDC with invited experts will be available in early 2001.
|