Àá½Ã¸¸ ±â´Ù·Á ÁÖ¼¼¿ä. ·ÎµùÁßÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
KMID : 0371019800130010053
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health
1980 Volume.13 No. 1 p.53 ~ p.66
An Analysis on Contents of Health-Concerned Editorials in Korean Neswspapers

Abstract
The editorials of the leading newspapers may reflect as well as help formulate the public opinions to a significant degree. Bearing this in mind, 4 this study was carried out to provide information useful in formulating such public health policies that could practically meet the social interests and demands in health appearing in the editorials of the newspapers. This analysis covered the editorials of 5 leading newspapers such as Donga Ilbo, Chungang Ilbo; Hankook Ilbo, Chosun Ilbo and Seoul Shinmoon for about 10 years from Jan, 1st, 1970 through Oct. 31th, 1979.


The major findings are as follows-


1. The total number of health-concerned editorials in the five daily papers for the period was 1,768 or occupied 6.4% of the total editorials of the sane sources. The increasing trend of frequnecy of the health-concerned editorials since 1976 indicates the increment of social interests and demands in health.


Analysing the contents, environmental pollution received the, greatest attention in those editorials, which was followed by medical affairs; environmental sanitation, and disease" control in order in terms of frequency of appearance. However, there was a tendency that the interests in the environmental pollution, medical affairs and social welfare tended to increase year by year, whereas those in environmental hygiene and disease control comparatively decreased.


2. Motives of dealing with the health-concerned editorials were provided by announcement of the governmental policies and implementation for 25.6,0/0 and by out-breaks of the relevant events for 23.9%. This tendency coincides with the general characteristics. of the editorials that reflect the timely issues. Closely analysing, however, the fact that the motives engendered by the out-breaks of the relevant events or by the season concerned comparatively tended to decrease as years pass by, indicates that the editorials tend more to seek the future-oriented demands in health rather than the current issue-oriented.


3. The editorials appeared to be more concerned with the governmental policies. 95.7¢¥ of all the editorials analysed were addressed to the government. This signifies the role of government in the field of public health and medical affairs. -Their attitudes toward health-related policies of the government were much more negatives than the other editorials that were addressed to the government in other fields. This suggests that the governmental interests in health were neither sufficient nor fair.


4. What the editorials most stressed were; (1) increment of governmental interests in health, (2) improvement of the governmental health administration, (3) enriching the basic statistics, and (4) development of various technologies pertinent to health affairs and disease control, and so forth. However, must of their suggestions were not concrete but rather abstract and conceptual.


5. The editorials also expressed strong interests in research area. The areas of the needed research most suggested by items are; (1) development of effective health care delivery system, (2) establishment of more practical system of calculating medical cost, (3) implementation of effective policies to control degenerative diseases, (4) division of medical care services and pharmaceutical services systems, (5) effective ways to prevent Co poisoning accidents, (6) changing status of environmental pollution and its effects upon health, and (7) status of occupational diseases, and so forth.


6. There were some editorials -not small in quantity -that have risk to mislead the public opinions as well as the health policies due to lack of professional knowledge of the writers. It is desirable to establish some kind of mechanism that screens the erroneous con-tents of the editorials to help prevent misleading opinions.
KEYWORD
FullTexts / Linksout information
 
Listed journal information
ÇмúÁøÈïÀç´Ü(KCI) KoreaMed ´ëÇÑÀÇÇÐȸ ȸ¿ø