All Stories

  1. Are Journalists Reporting on the Highest-Impact Climate Solutions? Findings from a Survey of Environmental Journalists
  2. Predictors of U.S. public support for climate aid to developing countries
  3. Role model stories can increase health professionals’ interest and perceived responsibility to engage in climate and sustainability actions
  4. A Global Review of Research on Effective Advocacy and Communication Strategies at the Intersection of Climate Change and Health
  5. Trust in climate science and climate scientists: A narrative review
  6. Public health benefits of zero-emission electric power generation in Virginia
  7. Rehabilitation Medicine Professionals’ Views on Climate Change and Health
  8. The potential role of descriptive and dynamic norms in promoting climate change advocacy
  9. Change in US state-level public opinion about climate change: 2008–2020
  10. The generational divide over climate change among American evangelicals
  11. Communication research to improve public engagement with climate change and human health
  12. Improving public understanding of climate change by supporting weathercasters
  13. Advocacy to support climate and health policies: recommended actions for the Society of Behavioral Medicine
  14. Are Journalists Reporting on the Highest-Impact Climate Solutions? Findings from a Survey of Environmental Journalists
  15. The Effects of Consensus Messages and the Importance of a Pre-Test: A Comment on Chinn and Hart (2021)
  16. Patients value climate change counseling provided by their pediatrician: The experience in one Wisconsin pediatric clinic
  17. Do Climate Change Consensus Messages Cause Reactance? A Comment on Chinn and Hart (2021)
  18. Health professional's willingness to advocate for strengthening global commitments to the Paris climate agreement: Findings from a multi-nation survey
  19. Health Professionals and the Climate Crisis: Trusted Voices, Essential Roles
  20. The Greta Thunberg Effect: Familiarity with Greta Thunberg predicts intentions to engage in climate activism in the United States
  21. The role of felt responsibility in climate change political participation
  22. Climate Change in the Minds of U.S. News Audiences
  23. The Effectiveness of Narrative Versus Didactic Information Formats on Pregnant Women’s Knowledge, Risk Perception, Self-Efficacy, and Information Seeking Related to Climate Change Health Risks
  24. Climate change in the American Mind: April 2020
  25. Politics and global warming, April 2020
  26. Social norms motivate COVID-19 preventive behaviors
  27. Americans’ Risk Perceptions and Emotional Responses to COVID-19, April 2020
  28. American Public Responses to COVID-19, April 2020
  29. Mask-wearing increased after a government recommendation: A natural experiment in the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic
  30. Climate change in the American mind: November 2019
  31. Politics and global warming: November 2019
  32. Climate Change in the American Mind: April 2019
  33. Exposure to Scientific Consensus Does Not Cause Psychological Reactance
  34. Limiting global warming to 1.5 to 2.0°C—A unique and necessary role for health professionals
  35. Climate Change in the American Mind: Data, Tools, and Trends
  36. The gateway belief model: A large-scale replication
  37. Perceived Social Consensus Can Reduce Ideological Biases on Climate Change
  38. A framework for climate change engagement through video games
  39. Perceptions of scientific consensus predict later beliefs about the reality of climate change using cross-lagged panel analysis: A response to Kerr and Wilson (2018)
  40. How Americans Respond to Information About Global Warming's Health Impacts: Evidence From a National Survey Experiment
  41. Global Warming’s “Six Americas Short Survey”: Audience Segmentation of Climate Change Views Using a Four Question Instrument
  42. The potential role of actively open-minded thinking in preventing motivated reasoning about controversial science
  43. Scientific risk communication about controversial issues influences public perceptions of scientists' political orientations and credibility
  44. Does Engagement in Advocacy Hurt the Credibility of Scientists? Results from a Randomized National Survey Experiment
  45. Conflict about Climate Change at the American Meteorological Society: Meteorologists’ Views on a Scientific and Organizational Controversy
  46. The importance of assessing and communicating scientific consensus
  47. Documenting the Human Health Impacts of Climate Change in Tropical and Subtropical Regions
  48. Climate Matters: A Comprehensive Educational Resource Program for Broadcast Meteorologists
  49. Consensus on consensus: a synthesis of consensus estimates on human-caused global warming
  50. Adapting to the Changing Climate: An Assessment of Local Health Department Preparations for Climate Change-Related Health Threats, 2008-2012
  51. The effect of industry activities on public support for ‘fracking’
  52. Views of AAAAI members on climate change and health
  53. The Role of Collective Efficacy in Climate Change Adaptation in India
  54. Highlighting consensus among medical scientists increases public support for vaccines: evidence from a randomized experiment
  55. Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey
  56. Engagement in the Third U.S. National Climate Assessment: commitment, capacity, and communication for impact
  57. Local Climate Experts: The Influence of Local TV Weather Information on Climate Change Perceptions
  58. Improving Public Engagement With Climate Change
  59. Extending the Impacts of Hostile Media Perceptions
  60. Issue-Specific Engagement: How Facebook Contributes to Opinion Leadership and Efficacy on Energy and Climate Issues
  61. Simple Messages Help Set the Record Straight about Scientific Agreement on Human-Caused Climate Change: The Results of Two Experiments
  62. The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change as a Gateway Belief: Experimental Evidence
  63. American Thoracic Society Member Survey on Climate Change and Health
  64. A Survey of African American Physicians on the Health Effects of Climate Change
  65. Evaluation of a national high school entertainment education program: The Alliance for Climate Education
  66. Mapping the shadow of experience of extreme weather events
  67. Weathercaster Views on Informal Climate Education: Similarities and Differences According to Climate Change Attitudes
  68. How to communicate the scientific consensus on climate change: plain facts, pie charts or metaphors?
  69. Meteorologists' Views About Global Warming: A Survey of American Meteorological Society Professional Members
  70. The genesis of climate change activism: from key beliefs to political action
  71. Climate Discussion Echoes Tobacco Debate
  72. Culture, Politics and Climate Change
  73. “Fracking” controversy and communication: Using national survey data to understand public perceptions of hydraulic fracturing
  74. Climate Change Education Through TV Weathercasts: Results of a Field Experiment
  75. If They Like You, They Learn from You: How a Brief Weathercaster-Delivered Climate Education Segment Is Moderated by Viewer Evaluations of the Weathercaster
  76. An attack on science? Media use, trust in scientists, and perceptions of global warming
  77. Do people “personally experience” global warming, and if so how, and does it matter?
  78. Public Perceptions of NASA's Research and Reactions to the Climate.Nasa.Gov Website
  79. Knowing Our Options for Setting the Record Straight, When Doing So Is Particularly Important
  80. A public health frame arouses hopeful emotions about climate change
  81. The legacy of climategate: undermining or revitalizing climate science and policy?
  82. Information Seeking About Global Climate Change Among Adolescents: The Role of Risk Perceptions, Efficacy Beliefs, and Parental Influences
  83. Support for climate policy and societal action are linked to perceptions about scientific agreement
  84. Editorial
  85. A rose by any other name ...?: What members of the general public prefer to call “climate change”
  86. Communication and Marketing as Tools to Cultivate the Public’s Health
  87. Identifying Like-Minded Audiences for Global Warming Public Engagement Campaigns: An Audience Segmentation Analysis and Tool Development
  88. On the Record with Edward Maibach
  89. “Climategate” Undermined Belief in Global Warming Among Many American TV Meteorologists
  90. Republicans and Climate Change: An Audience Analysis of Predictors for Belief and Policy Preferences
  91. The Impact of the Daily Show and the Colbert Report on Public Attentiveness to Science and the Environment
  92. Time to Take Action on Climate Communication
  93. Public Perceptions of Climate Change as a Human Health Risk: Surveys of the United States, Canada and Malta
  94. Opportunities and barriers to disease prevention counseling in the primary care setting: a multisite qualitative study with US health consumers
  95. Climategate, Public Opinion, and the Loss of Trust
  96. Promoting physical activity and reducing climate change: Opportunities to replace short car trips with active transportation
  97. No More “Business as Usual”
  98. Transdisciplinary Science: The Nexus Between Communication and Public Health
  99. Climate Change and Local Public Health in the United States: Preparedness, Programs and Perceptions of Local Public Health Department Directors
  100. Economic Evaluation of the US Environmental Protection Agency's SunWise Program: Sun Protection Education for Young Children
  101. Long-Term Trends in Adolescent and Young Adult Smoking in the United States: Metapatterns and Implications
  102. The Effectiveness of Mass Communication to Change Public Behavior
  103. Use of Consumer Survey Data to Target Cessation Messages to Smokers Through Mass Media
  104. Communication and marketing as tools to cultivate the public's health: a proposed "people and places" framework
  105. What Is the Best Approach to Reducing Birth Defects Associated with Isotretinoin?
  106. A Convergent Diffusion and Social Marketing Approach for Disseminating Proven Approaches to Physical Activity Promotion
  107. Understanding Consumers' Health Information Preferences Development and Validation of a Brief Screening Instrument
  108. National action plan to reduce smoking during pregnancy: The National Partnership to Help Pregnant Smokers Quit
  109. Explicating Social Marketing: What is it, and What isn't It?
  110. Recreating Communities to Support Active Living: A New Role for Social Marketing
  111. Public perceptions about prematurity
  112. Conceptualizing the multidimensional nature of self-efficacy: Assessment of situational context and level of behavioral challenge to maintain safer sex.
  113. Conceptualizing the multidimensional nature of self-efficacy: Assessment of situational context and level of behavioral challenge to maintain safer sex.
  114. Five Strategies for Encouraging a Marketing Orientation in Social Change Organizations
  115. A Social Cognitive-Based Model for Condom Use Among College Students
  116. Implications of a Health Lifestyle and Medication Analysis for Improving Hypertension Control
  117. Planning and Initiation of the ONDCP National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign
  118. Personal Strategies for HIV Prevention: The Development and Validation of a Strategy‐Coding Instrument1
  119. Why Americans Eat What They Do
  120. The NIMH Multisite HIV Prevention Trial: Reducing HIV Sexual Risk Behavior
  121. Promoting Cancer Prevention and Screening: The Impact of the Cancer Information Service. Part 7
  122. The relationship of sexual abuse and HIV risk behaviors among heterosexual adult female STD patients
  123. Psychological and Behavioral Factors Predicting Attendance at a Community-based HIV Prevention Intervention
  124. Reviews : Edward Maibach & Roxanne Louiselle Parrott (Eds.), Designing Health Messages: Approaches from Communication Theory and Public Health Practice Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 1995, 304 pp. US$42.00 (hbk); ISBN 0-8039-5397-6. US$21.95 (pbk); ISBN ...
  125. Enabling Health: Policy and Administrative Practices at a Crossroads
  126. Moving People to Behavior Change: A Staged Social Cognitive Approach to Message Design
  127. Focus Groups: An Interview Method for Nursing Research
  128. Negative and Positive Television Messages
  129. Changes in Self-Efficacy and Health Behavior in Response to a Minimal Contact Community Health Campaign
  130. Cognitive Responses to AIDS Information
  131. Managing health promotion in the workplace: Guidelines for implementation and evaluation