‘When the dog bites’: What can we learn about health geography from newspaper coverage in a ‘model city’ for dog-bite prevention?
Despite calls for the adoption of ‘One-Health’ approaches, dog-bite injuries remain neglected in healthcare and public health, and our study may help to understand why. Media coverage can influence policy directions, including policies that address dogs. We collected articles (n = 65) published in t...
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Published in | Health & place Vol. 57; pp. 70 - 73 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
Elsevier Ltd
01.05.2019
Elsevier Science Ltd Elsevier |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Despite calls for the adoption of ‘One-Health’ approaches, dog-bite injuries remain neglected in healthcare and public health, and our study may help to understand why. Media coverage can influence policy directions, including policies that address dogs. We collected articles (n = 65) published in two local newspapers, 2012–2017, then carried out an ethnographically-informed discourse analysis of the dog-bite reports. The newspapers portrayed dog-bites mainly as matters of public disorder, as opposed to priorities for healthcare and public health. Even as our study took place in a city that has shown dog-bite reductions without recourse to ‘breed bans’ or restrictions (i.e., breed-specific legislation), journalists still tended to emphasize dog breed as a narrative element in explaining dog-bite incidents. Nonetheless, the news coverage did not reproduce a ‘nature versus nurture’ dichotomy. Rather, the journalists presented dog breed, and presumably associated aggressive behaviour, as entanglements with social, economic, and cultural contexts. Meanwhile, the news stories reduced contextual complexity to geographic locations, as codes for community reputation, in attributing causality and morality.
•A collection of newspaper articles about local dog-bite incidents was analysed.•Journalists portrayed dog-bites as public disorder rather than a health concern.•Dog type (‘breed’) was prominent as an explanatory factor, if not strictly causal.•Journalists also paid attention to social, economic, and cultural contexts.•Overall, these stories used community reputation as shorthand for causal inference. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 1353-8292 1873-2054 1873-2054 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.healthplace.2019.03.001 |