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Feeling pressured by health prevention campaigns as a motivational force: Examining the role of visual and verbal mode design features.

Michelle MöriPerina SiegenthalerAndreas Fahr
Published in: Health marketing quarterly (2021)
This research examines the influence of address style (direct, no address) and narrative voice (first-person, third-person) on the feeling of being pressured by a public service announcement about work stress in two sequential studies. The results of a choice-based conjoint analysis show that persuasive messages designed with a first-person narrative voice and direct address tend to pressure recipients. Results of a between-subjects online experiment suggest that this feeling increases subjects' behavioral intentions to prevent stress when people interact parasocially with the displayed character. Both direct address and first-person narrative voice led directly to reduced behavioral intention to prevent stress.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • public health
  • health information
  • stress induced
  • social media
  • emergency department
  • heat stress
  • risk assessment
  • health promotion