TY - JOUR
T1 - Social Media Users’ Engagement with Fear Appeal Elements in Government’s Health Crisis Communication via State-Owned Media
AU - Yao, Le
AU - Ngai, Cindy Sing Bik
AU - Singh, Rita Gill
AU - Chen, Fangfang
N1 - This work was supported by the Hong Kong Polytechnic University under Grant P0046380.
PY - 2024/8
Y1 - 2024/8
N2 - Government health messaging is significant to the containment of public
health crises. Such communication may benefit from using fear appeal, a
message strategy for promoting health and preventing diseases. Yet
little scholarly attention has been paid to how fear appeal is employed
in government messaging to promote social media engagement through
online actions including likes, shares, and comments. These actions play
a meaningful role in addressing communication exigencies within the
context of health crises. In this study, quantitative content analysis
and corpus linguistics methods were employed to analyze fear
appeal-related elements in COVID-19 messages sent by a state-owned media
outlet on social media. The results show that when compared to messages
without threat, messages conveying threat elicited significantly more
comments, in which emotions and perceptions to threat and efficacy were
exhibited, while messages containing both threat and efficacy generated
more engagement in comparison to messages with threat alone. Moreover,
while subdimensions under efficacy were positive predictors of
engagement, those under threat were primarily found to have exerted
negative effects. The findings provide insights into how fear appeal
elements can be employed in government health crisis communication to
engage the public.
AB - Government health messaging is significant to the containment of public
health crises. Such communication may benefit from using fear appeal, a
message strategy for promoting health and preventing diseases. Yet
little scholarly attention has been paid to how fear appeal is employed
in government messaging to promote social media engagement through
online actions including likes, shares, and comments. These actions play
a meaningful role in addressing communication exigencies within the
context of health crises. In this study, quantitative content analysis
and corpus linguistics methods were employed to analyze fear
appeal-related elements in COVID-19 messages sent by a state-owned media
outlet on social media. The results show that when compared to messages
without threat, messages conveying threat elicited significantly more
comments, in which emotions and perceptions to threat and efficacy were
exhibited, while messages containing both threat and efficacy generated
more engagement in comparison to messages with threat alone. Moreover,
while subdimensions under efficacy were positive predictors of
engagement, those under threat were primarily found to have exerted
negative effects. The findings provide insights into how fear appeal
elements can be employed in government health crisis communication to
engage the public.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85198730746&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/10810730.2024.2378338
DO - 10.1080/10810730.2024.2378338
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85198730746
SN - 1081-0730
VL - 29
SP - 524
EP - 537
JO - Journal of Health Communication
JF - Journal of Health Communication
IS - 8
ER -