Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, Kingston University, London, UK
2. Department of Health Behaviours and Public Health Services, Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames, Kingston upon Thames, UK
3. Faculty of Health, Science, Social Care and Education, Kingston University, London, UK
Abstract
Objective Local authority-led online campaigns offer the possibility of targeted health promotion to connect local services and residents. This study assesses the evidence for medium (e.g., click-trhoughs) and high (off-line behaviour change) levels of public engagement with four local authority-led campaigns across a variety of public health promotions (sexual health, weight loss, and vaccination), online marketing approaches (social media marketing, search engine marketing, and programmatic marketing) and target demographics (language, gender, age, income, ethnicity) undertaken by a London borough local authority. Methods Employing quasi-experimental and observational study designs, engagement with local health services during the course of the campaigns was evaluated. The first three campaigns were evaluated based on an interrupted time series model of intervention assessment comparing outcome variables of interest during the campaign to periods before and after the campaign period. The results of the fourth campaign, an observational case-study, are discussed using descriptive statistics only. Results The analyses of the high engagement data for two of the three campaigns statistically assessed clearly supported the effectiveness of the campaigns. While the effect of high engagement could not be determined in the other two campaigns, they provide data that may be useful in online campaign design. Conclusions The evidence assessed in this study across a variety of platforms, health promotion initiatives, and population targets suggests that local authority-led online marketing campaigns for health promotion may be useful for increasing participation in public health programmes.
Funder
Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames
Reference37 articles.
1. Health and Social Care Act 2012, https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2012/7/contents/enacted (2012, accessed 14 March 2023).
2. How social marketing works in health care
3. Public Health England. Place-based approaches for reducing health inequalities: main report. 28.09.2021 https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/health-inequalities-place-based-approaches-to-reduce-inequalities/place-based-approaches-for-reducing-health-inequalities-main-report (accessed 24 October 2023).
4. Tulane University. Why Community Health is good for Public Health https://publichealth.tulane.edu/blog/why-community-health-is-important-for-public-health/ (accessed 24 October 2023).
5. The behaviour change wheel: A new method for characterising and designing behaviour change interventions