The Oklahoman

Are public health ads worth the price?

- By Eric Berger

ST. LOUIS — The public service announceme­nt showed a mother finding her teenage son lifeless, juxtaposed with the sound of a ukulele and a woman singing, “That's how, how you OD'd on heroin.”

It aired locally during the 2015 Super Bowl but attracted national attention and has been viewed more than 500,000 times on YouTube.

“You want to tap into a nerve, an emotional nerve, and controvers­y and anger,” said Mark Schupp, whose consulting firm created the ad pro bono. “The spot was designed to do that, so we were happy with it.”

But like other ads and PSAs seeking to move the needle on public health, it went only so far.

Marketing experts say public health advertisin­g often falls short because it incites people's worst fears rather than providing clear steps viewers can take to save lives. They say lessons from opioid messaging can inform campaigns seeking to influence behavior that could help curb the coronaviru­s pandemic, such as wearing masks, not gathering in big groups and getting a COVID-19 vaccine.

The Super Bowl ad was produced and aired by the St. Louis chapter of the National Council on Alcohol and Drug Abuse using $100,000 from an anonymous donor. Then-director Howard Weissman said a top priority for his group was for Missouri to start a prescripti­on drug monitoring program.

Five years later, Missouri remains the only state without a statewide program. And the number of opioid deaths has steadily increased in that time, state data shows, up from 672 in all of 2015 to 716 deaths in just the first six months of 2020.

The national council, now called PreventEd, i s one of many nonprofits and government agencies that invest millions in messaging aimed at curbing the opioid epidemic. People who study such advertisem­ents said it's difficult to measure their impact, but if the metric is the number of overdose deaths, they have not yet succeeded. The country set a record for overdose deaths in 2019 that it was on pace to break in 2020.

“You have to give them a solution, especially in a health context, l i ke with opioids, because similar to with cigarette smoking, if you increase fear and don't give a solution, they are j ust going to abuse more because t hat's t heir coping mechanism,” said Punam Anand Keller, a Dartmouth College professor who studies health marketing.

To address public health issues, marketers often use i mag e s o f d i s e a s e d l u n g s t o d i s c o u r a g e s mokers o r the bloody aftermath of car crashes to prevent drunken driving. But these can provoke “defensive responses” that may be avoided by giving people ways to take action, s a i d a 2 0 1 4 I n t e r n a t i o n a l Journal of Psychology review of campaigns that use fear to persuade people.

Missouri's state health and mental health department­s, with the help of federal funds, spent at l east $ 800,000 on advertisin­g in 2019 to curb the opioid epidemic through their Time 2 Act and NoMODeaths campaigns, according to data from advertisin­g agencies and partner organizati­ons.

Mac Curran, a 3 4- yearold social media influencer, described his struggles with opioid addiction in a number of videos for Time 2 Act, one of which was viewed more than 100,000 times on Facebook. In another recent video, Curran used storytelli­ng to highlight the benefits of getting treatment f or his addiction. He talked about strangers cheering for him when he returned to a friend's streetwear store after getting out of the recovery program, and discussed how he learned coping skills he could use throughout life.

Jay Wins ten, a Harvard University scientist who spearheade­d the U.S. designate d-driver campaign to combat drunken driving, described Curran's videos as “really excellent because he comes across as genuine and well spoken. People remember stories more than they do someone simply lecturing at them.”

Still, Winsten emphasized the importance of including actionable steps and would like to see Missouri and other groups focus on teaching friends of users “how to intervene and what language to use and not to use.”

Others, including the libertaria­n Cato Institute, argue that P SA son drug use just don't work and point to the history of failed campaigns to discourage teen marijuana use.

Yet agencies keep trying. Missouri' s mental health department and the Missouri Institute of Mental Health at the University of Missouri-St. Louis convened focus groups in 2019 with drug users and their families and captured their words on billboards for the NoMODeaths campaign. One said, “Don't give up on treatment. It' s worth the work,” and gave a number to text for help with heroin, fentanyl or pill misuse.

In addition to giving informatio­n, the goal was “to let people who use drugs know that other people care if they live or die,” said Rachel Winograd, a psychologi­st who leads the NoMODeaths group aimed at reducing harm from opioid misuse.

She said she understand­s the argument that PSAs are a waste of money, given that organizati­ons like hers have limited funds and also try to provide housing for those in recovery and naloxone, used to revive people after overdoses.

But, Winograd said, some of the advertisem­ents appeared to work. The organizati­on saw a big increase after the ads ran in the number of people who visited its website or texted a number for informatio­n on treatment or obtaining naloxone.

Although federal funding rose for fiscal years 2021 and 2022, Winograd's team and state officials decided to cut NoMODeaths' advertisin­g budget in half and instead spend the money on direct services like naloxone, treatment and housing.

Now health agencies are consumed by the coronaviru­s pandemic and are trying to craft messages that cut through politicall­y charged discourse and get the public to adopt safety measures such as wearing masks, staying physically distanced and getting vaccinated.

Convincing people to wear masks has been difficult because messages have been mixed. Missouri' s health department has tried to depolitici­ze mask-wearing and get people to view it as a public health solution, said spokespers­on Lisa Cox.

But Missouri Gov. Mike Parson has appeared without a mask at public events and has declined to enact a statewide mask mandate. He also said at a Missouri Cattlemen's Associatio­n event in July, “If you want to wear a dang mask, wear a mask.”

Cox would not comment on whether Parson's approach undermined the state's public health efforts, but Keller said it did.

Missouri's messaging about vaccines has been much more straightfo­rward and clear. A website provides f acts and answers to common questions as it encourages people to “make an informed choice” on whether to get the shots.

 ?? SERVICE] ?? Mac Curran shares his opioid addiction recovery story via social media. One of his videos for Time 2 Act Missouri, a campaign targeting opioid addiction, received more than 100,000 views on Facebook. [LEFT PHOTO BY DANIEL ZOFNESS, RIGHT PHOTO BY BRANDON RIEGERIX/KHN VIA TRIBUNE NEWS
SERVICE] Mac Curran shares his opioid addiction recovery story via social media. One of his videos for Time 2 Act Missouri, a campaign targeting opioid addiction, received more than 100,000 views on Facebook. [LEFT PHOTO BY DANIEL ZOFNESS, RIGHT PHOTO BY BRANDON RIEGERIX/KHN VIA TRIBUNE NEWS

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