Epidemics and Agendas: The Politics of Nightly News Coverage of AIDS
- 1 April 1991
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Duke University Press in Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
- Vol. 16 (2), 215-250
- https://doi.org/10.1215/03616878-16-2-215
Abstract
We examine why the exponential growth of AIDS cases or the widespread professional perception of a health crisis did not move the epidemic more quickly onto the agenda of public problems. One possible explanation focuses on how the national news media's construction of AIDS shaped the meaning of the epidemic for mass and elite audiences. An examination of nightly news coverage by the three major networks from 1982 to 1989 reveals considerable variability and volatility in their coverage. Topic-driven saturation coverage occurred only during three short periods in 1983, 1985, and 1987, when the epidemic seemed likely to affect the “general population.” Only at such moments did public opinion shift and discussion and debate in government begin. Otherwise, the typical AIDS story tended less to sensationalize than to reassure, largely because journalists depended upon government officials and high-ranking doctors to present them with evidence of news. Such sources had interests either in avoiding coverage or in pointing toward breakthroughs; more critical sources, especially within the gay movement, had far less access to the news. In concluding, we considered the prospects and pitfalls of the news media's power to shape the public agenda.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Federal Spending for Illness Caused by the Human Immunodeficiency VirusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- A Report: AIDSPublic Opinion Quarterly, 1987
- Baby Jane Doe in the MediaJournal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1986
- Science and the Media: The Boundaries of TruthHealth Affairs, 1985
- The acquired immune deficiency syndrome. The ever-broadening clinical spectrumPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1983
- Policy Making in Congressional Committees: The Impact of “Environmental” FactorsAmerican Political Science Review, 1978
- Setting the Agenda in the U.S. Senate: A Theory of Problem SelectionBritish Journal of Political Science, 1977
- News as Purposive Behavior: On the Strategic Use of Routine Events, Accidents, and ScandalsAmerican Sociological Review, 1974
- The Issues of the Sixties: An Exploratory Study in the Dynamics of Public OpinionPublic Opinion Quarterly, 1973
- Press Coverage of Civil Disorders: A Case Study of Winston-Salem, 1967Public Opinion Quarterly, 1969