Consumers’ search for health answers finds new paths amid a deluge of information
28 April 2021 - 12:52AM
At a time when information is ubiquitous and public health is top
of mind, a new study on health fluency indicates that the role of
health companies in consumer education is shifting amid new,
diverse voices, yet still plays a meaningful and important role in
the public conversation.
The signature study—The Fluency Report: Health
Literacy—released today by the S.I. Newhouse School of Public
Communications at Syracuse University, was conducted by the
Newhouse School’s W2O Emerging Insights Lab (EIL), led by Regina
Luttrell, associate dean and director of the EIL, in association
with Real Chemistry, a global health innovation company.
Digital health literacy encompasses a consumer’s understanding
of topics such as insurance coverage, disease diagnoses, medication
adherence, coordinated care and preventative care. The
democratization of information was already changing the way the
public sought out information on these topics, but trends
accelerated in 2020 as a concrete set of issues dominated the
headlines: the COVID-19 pandemic, the presidential election, health
care policy, racial divides and equity and access.
“There is a seismic change happening in the nation, and most
notably in health care,” Luttrell says. “Understanding consumer
conversations occurring in the health space will help us better
comprehend the level and depth of knowledge and factual
understanding by consumers, which can lead to better solutions for
individual and societal health outcomes. This study will be an
ongoing annual effort by the W2O EIL and Real Chemistry to ensure
consumers and organizations are doing all they can to align on
facts, data and information regarding health.”
“As a global health innovation company, Real Chemistry is
dedicated to improving health care through marketing and
communications that help get the right treatment to the right
patient at the right time,” says Jim Weiss ‘87, founder and CEO of
Real Chemistry and a Newhouse alumnus. “Further, our partnership
with the Newhouse School, which includes the EIL and the W2O Center
for Social Commerce, is designed to improve the career
opportunities of students, and to strengthen the talent pool of
health care organizations globally. This study reflects our
collective desire to up-level health confidence across
society.”
The W2O EIL research team employed digital and social research
models to ascertain what online audiences were interested in,
discussing/debating and concerned about, highlighting key data that
resonated. Additionally, AI (artificial intelligence) and machine
learning allowed them to analyze text and identify themes.
Among key findings of the report:
- Democratization of information and the plethora of social and
digital platforms have led consumers to turn to a wider variety of
health care sources. They now seek out authoritative sources for
information about well-defined health care issues but use social
media and crowdsourcing for information about less-understood
topics and more authentic dialogue.
- Consumers view search and earned media as a “tell me”
interaction, and social media as a “talk with me” interaction. They
crave engagement and conversation, rather than the pushing of
information.
- Consumers are looking for diverse voices who can speak
authentically to historically underserved populations. They don’t
always see companies as the best spokespeople but want companies to
play the role of “creator and convener” and help elevate the
spokespeople they value and trust.
- Consumers consider themselves to be their own best health care
advocates and will disregard sources that don’t respect and work
with that perspective.
“As information sources have become fragmented and diverse,
consumers are looking for authentic, trusted voices who speak to
them and look like them,” Luttrell says.
“We at Newhouse are grateful for our strong partnership with
Real Chemistry, which provides incredible opportunities for our
students and helps amplify the thought leadership of our talented
faculty scholars,” says Newhouse dean Mark J. Lodato. “This
important study provides insight that has universal appeal to the
entire industry.”
A copy of the report is available at
newhouse.syr.edu/research/w2o-emerging-insights-lab. For more
information, contact Luttrell at 315.443.3613 or
rmluttre@syr.edu.
Keith Kobland
Syracuse University
3154158095
kkobland@syr.edu