Publication | Closed Access
Women Matter in Newsrooms: How Power and Critical Mass Relate to the Coverage of the HPV Vaccine
76
Citations
0
References
2011
Year
Critical Public HealthFemale ReportersFemale JournalistsCommunicationVaccine HesitancyMedia StudiesJournalismInteractive JournalismWomen MatterPreventive MedicineHuman Papillomavirus VaccinesHealth CommunicationGender StudiesNews AnalyticsPublic HealthFeminist HealthContent AnalysisMedia CritiqueVaccine SafetyNews CoverageFeminist TheoryEditorial IndependenceVaccinationNews ExecutivesHpv VaccineHow PowerVaccine EfficacyArtsMedicineWomen's Health
This study explored how female journalists affect news content when holding positions of power, reaching a critical mass in the newsroom, and covering an issue that appeals to them. The study compared a male-dominated news organization's coverage of the human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine with coverage by a more gender-balanced organization in terms of news executives and reporters. It also explored whether content produced by female reporters from both organizations differed. The more gender-balanced organization covered the vaccine more frequently and more prominently, and used more diverse themes than its counterpart. The content created by female reporters at different outlets also diverged.