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Building Patient and Consumer Awareness. Allan J. Lazar, Director, OCKT: ModeratorFarah Englert, Associate Director for Marketing, OCKT: Overview of Marketing and Implementation ActivitiesEllen Crown, Health Communications Specialist, OCKT: Social MediaKathy Crosby, Vice President, Group Campaign Director, Ad Council: Patient Engagement Projects for TV and RadioQ
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1. Building Patient and Consumer Awareness to Influence Behavior Change Office of Communications and Knowledge Transfer
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
AHRQ 3rd Annual Conference
Bethesda, MD – September 14, 2009
2. Building Patient and Consumer Awareness Allan J. Lazar, Director, OCKT: Moderator
Farah Englert, Associate Director for Marketing, OCKT: Overview of Marketing and Implementation Activities
Ellen Crown, Health Communications Specialist, OCKT: Social Media
Kathy Crosby, Vice President, Group Campaign Director, Ad Council: Patient Engagement Projects for TV and Radio
Q&A
3. From Knowledge to Behavior Change – A Long Road 1601 – Lemon juice supplement shown to eliminate scurvy among sailors (Lancaster)
1747 – Citrus juice supplement eliminates scurvy (Lind)
1795 – British Navy implements citrus juice supplement – 195 years after discovery!
4. Awareness to Action In the current environment, there are many new opportunities for expanding patient and consumer awareness
This increased awareness is critical to health care reform and building a more efficient, effective, and inclusive health care system
The primary challenge is in getting consumers and patients to move from being passive to becoming actively engaged in our health and health care
5. How to Reach Any Consumers (Or Really Audience) Decide on audience – most needed, easy, influencers
Audience motivation – what drives them
USP, barriers, competition
Vehicles, partners
Timing?
Media coverage
Feedback – rinse and repeat
KEEP AT IT!
6. AHRQ’s Tools for Engaging Consumers Take Charge of Your Health
Two years for actress Fran Drescher to get the correct diagnosis (uterine cancer)
Collaboration with AHRQ and Drescher’s Cancer Schmancer Foundation
Video PSAs offer advice on how to be in charge of your health with early diagnosis
7. Fran Drescher Helps Get Out the Message Fran Drescher encourages consumers to take charge of their health care
Discusses the importance of asking health care providers the right questions For a change of pace…..
Last year, AHRQ collaborated with actress Fran Drescher to develop video PSAs on taking charge of your health.
As you may know, it took two years for Ms. Dresher to get the correct diagnosis of uterine cancer. With her characteristic humor, she is an powerful spokeswoman on early diagnosis. The video PSAs are available on our healthcare 411 section of the AHRQ website.
For a change of pace…..
Last year, AHRQ collaborated with actress Fran Drescher to develop video PSAs on taking charge of your health.
As you may know, it took two years for Ms. Dresher to get the correct diagnosis of uterine cancer. With her characteristic humor, she is an powerful spokeswoman on early diagnosis. The video PSAs are available on our healthcare 411 section of the AHRQ website.
8. Getting the Message OUT! Marketing plans
Electronic products and tools
Press releases
Direct mail
Web casts, chats
E-Marketing – e-mail, Twitter, Facebook, etc. Web site
Listservs
Press conferences and briefings
Radio interviews
Partnerships
9. You Can Partner With AHRQ Co-Branding Products Evidence-based products from a reliable, unbiased source
Recognition with providers and patients
Free content
Meets all Federal disability requirements
Examples:
United Healthcare Services Co. of River Valley (Illinois): 50,000 copies of Questions are the Answer
Memorial Health System (Colorado): 10,000 copies of Your Guide to Coumadin/Warfarin Therapy
Many opportunities
10. A Few Last Thoughts... Understand what’s on the minds of consumers
Reach them at their level with information and tools they can understand
Make communications actionable
If possible, make it easy; entertainment doesn’t hurt
11.
12. Building Patient and Consumer Awareness Allan J. Lazar, Director, OCKT: Moderator
Farah Englert, Associate Director for Marketing, OCKT: Overview of Marketing and Implementation Activities
Ellen Crown, Health Communications Specialist, OCKT: Social Media
Kathy Crosby, Vice President, Group Campaign Director, Ad Council: Patient Engagement Projects for TV and Radio
Q&A
14. Major Activities Media/Marketing
Audiovisual/TV/Radio
Knowledge Transfer
Writing/Editing/Design
Web/Clearinghouse
Presentations/Exhibits
15. Original Writing Smorgasbord Options:
Journal articles, white papers
Consumer products
Research Activities summaries and briefs
Promotional brochures, cards, and fliers
Dr. Clancy’s commentaries
Audiovisual, TV, radio, podcast scripts
Spanish translations/health literacy
16. Editing Lite Bite:
Production Edit
Standard level of effort, quick turnaround time, uses fewest resources
Samples:
Slides
Fliers
Posters/displays
E-newsletters
17. Editing Cafeteria:
Copy Edit
Medium level of effort, time, and resources
Sentence and paragraph structure; checking tables, charts, and references
Samples:
Conference summaries
Data reports, e.g., “Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture: 2009 Comparative Database Report”
Adapted grantee materials, e.g., “Preventing Hospital-Acquired Venous Thromboembolism”
18. Editing Gourmet:
Substantive Edit
Highest level of effort
Rewrite, add new sections, review source documents
Samples:
NHQR/DR and related products
AHRQ Annual Report
Fact sheets, program briefs
Large-volume compendiums, e.g., “Nurses Handbook,” “Advances in Patient Safety”
19. Information Resources A la Carte:
Information Resources Center
Online literature searches
Onsite literature collection
Bibliographic management
Online e-mail responses -- over 2,000 requests per year
20. Media Lite Bite Menu Options:
Articles in AHRQ Electronic Newsletters
Articles in Research Activities
21. Media Cafeteria Menu Options:
Outreach and “pitching” to media
E-mails to targeted health reporters
Development of podcasts and other AV products
Advice columns, commentaries, etc.
Success Story: “News and Numbers” featuring HCUP and MEPS stats enjoy regular and broad media coverage
22. Media Gourmet Menu Options:
Press conference
Press release to 1,500+ media outlets
Media training, Qs and As, and talking points
Coordination and followup for media interviews
Success Story: Prostate cancer screening recommendation over age 75
23. Marketing Lite Bite Menu Options:
E-mail outreach to stakeholders
Development of fliers, slides, speeches, and other marketing materials
Distribute materials at AHRQ exhibit booths
24. Marketing Cafeteria Menu Options:
E-mail and telephone outreach to key stakeholders
Direct mail to key stakeholders
Marketing outreach to Web news sites
Pursuit of partnership agreements
Success Story: Print partnership with AARP on “Staying Healthy at 50+” checklists
25. Marketing Gourmet Menu Options:
Sustained outreach to key stakeholder organizations to develop dissemination opportunities
Work with CME developers to create audience-appropriate CME
Success Story: Carolyn Clancy’s “Navigating the Health Care System” column on AARP Web site
26. Audiovisual / TV / Radio Smorgasbord Options:
Newscasts distributed via podcasts and the Web
Radiocasts distributed to radio stations
Web conference
“In store” audio announcements
PSAs, e.g., Ad Council, etc.
DVDs/videos
27. Knowledge Transfer/Implementation Success Stories: Medicaid Medical Directors Learning Network
At least 30 Medicaid medical directors using at least one AHRQ product, tool or research finding to make a policy decision
Cesarean Delivery on Maternal Request
Off-Label Use of Atypical Antipsychotics
Non-Invasive Imaging for Coronary Artery Disease
28. Knowledge Transfer/Implementation Success Stories: Hospital Product Line
Case studies from at least 50 hospitals representing 10 health systems in 10 states showing how they have used at least one AHRQ tool
Hospital Culture Survey
Hospital CAHPS
Transforming Hospitals DVD
TeamSTEPPS
Preventing VTE in Hospitals
Improving Patient Flow in the Emergency Dept.
30. Building Patient and Consumer Awareness Allan J. Lazar, Director, OCKT: Moderator
Farah Englert, Associate Director for Marketing, OCKT: Overview of Marketing and Implementation Activities
Ellen Crown, Health Communications Specialist, OCKT: Social Media
Kathy Crosby, Vice President, Group Campaign Director, Ad Council: Patient Engagement Projects for TV and Radio
Q&A
31. Twitter & FacebookJust for Kids? (Photos of teens on computers and using cell phones and cameras)
(Photos of teens on computers and using cell phones and cameras)
32. Barack 2.0 Present on 16+ social media sites
2 million profiles on My.BarackObama.com
Used MiGente (Latinos), BlackPlanet (African Americans), Glee ("gay, lesbian and everyone else”) to connect with specific groups
Used Flickr and YouTube to distribute "messages of hope"
(Photo of Barack Obama)
(Photo of Barack Obama)
33. Businesses Use Social Media Comcast: customer service on Twitter
H&R Block: free tax advice on Facebook
DELL: Used Twitter to sell $1 million+ discounted products
34. Today’s Headlines AHRQ Offers New Media
On Demand - Information Consumers Can Use
Social Media Broadens AHRQ’s Connection with Consumers
Social Media Empowers Consumers to Share AHRQ Information
35. Social Media – Cheat Sheet Podcast/Radiocast (Audio or video files you listen/watch on IPod or computer)
Twitter (Like text messaging, but everyone can see your conversation)
Facebook (Web site connects you with friends and others with similar interests)
RSS Feeds (E-mails you stuff, such as press releases)
Social Bookmarking (Select Web page, such as AHRQ Homepage, and send content to social networking sites, such as your Facebook page)
36. AHRQ Using Audio & Video Podcasts
Radiocasts
Online Videos
Public Service Ads/Announcements
Healthcare 411 www.healthcare411.ahrq.gov
37. AHRQ is Personalizing Communications E-mail Updates
RSS Feeds
38. AHRQ Helping ConsumersShare Your Research Bookmark & Share (Chiclets)
“Send to a Friend”
39. AHRQ on Twitter Twitter http://www.twitter.com/AHRQNews
“AHRQ Spearheads Effort to Add Patient Voice to Error Reporting” [with link to longer story] (HCPro Editors)
“Women: Stay Healthy at Any Age; Your Checklist for Health, (AHRQ).” (Carolyn Newstrom, a RN who lives in Calif.)
“Looking forward to AHRQ conference in September.” (Alina Hsu, health care worker)
40. AHRQ’s Social Media Works Disseminates knowledge
Makes your research easier to find, share, use, and implement
41.
43. Ad Council’s Mission Identify a select number of significant public issues and stimulate action on those issues through communications programs that make a measurable difference in our society
44. Social Issues Through the Decades
45. Ad Council’s Engagement Model Develop broad-based, cross platform programs that motivate people to think or act differently
Consider the audience and the consumer insight as aspringboard for developing integrated vehicles
Create programs that inspire interaction
46. Consumer Engagement Opportunities
48. Measuring Campaign Success Donated media dollars
Press coverage
Campaign buzz
Website and online activities
Call volume
Issue related data
Changes in attitudes and behaviors
49. Ad Council Campaigns Get Results Seat Belt Education: Seat Belt usage has increased from 21% to 82% since 1982, saving more than 85,000 lives per year
Big Brothers Big Sisters: In the first nine months of the campaign, applications to become a mentor increased by 75%
Drunk Driving Prevention: 68% of people exposed to advertising report personally acting to prevent drunk driving
50. Social MarketingCommunication that Inspires Change
51. Social Marketing that Changes the Norm Social marketing sells and ‘ideal’ that saves a life, improves a life and or makes someone feel good about becoming involved in someone else’s life
52. The Value of Social Marketing Create awareness of an issue
Educate the public
Change attitudes and feelings
Motivate a desired behavior
53. How You Get There From HereResearch and Planning
54. What Are You Trying To Do? First, determine your objectives for the program
55. Where Do You Start? All compelling work starts with the process of strategic planning
The discipline of strategic planning will allow you to uncover key insights that will relate to your target audience
56. Where Do You Start? Review secondary research
Facts and figures about the issue
Review of previous/similar campaigns
Industry experts
Consumer trends
Conduct consumer research
Qualitative
Quantitative
Uncover key insights that are unique, relevant and actionable
57. How You Get There From HereCreative Development
58. How Do You Create Great Work? Whether it’s an ad, a brochure or a book mark, great creative communicates just one idea and starts with a single-minded creative brief:
Background
Target audience
Target insight
Main message
Support for message
Call to action
59. How Do You Create Great Work? A creative brief must be completely single-minded
Background:
Why are we advertising?
What is the problem that must be solved?
60. How Do You Create Great Work? A creative brief must be completely single-minded
Target audience
Who are the “low-hanging fruit” that you hope to change?
How do they define themselves?
What do they currently believe about the issue?
How open are they to change?
How far do you need to move them before they take action?
61. How Do You Create Great Work? Understand that great creative is:
Work that motivates people
Sends a message that strikes a chord
Moves them to start doing something new or differently
62. How Do You Create Great Work? A creative brief must be completely single-minded
Support for message
Why should they believe the message?
What is the proof?
63. How Do You Create Great Work? A creative brief must be completely single-minded
Call to action:
What do we want the target to do?
64. How Do You Create Great Work? In every communication, talk to the audience as you would a friend
If possible, entertain them
If needed, make them uncomfortable
Once you’ve got them, don’t ask for too much
Tell them why they shouldn’t drive drunk…
Put kids under 4’9” in booster seats…
Take small steps to get healthier…
65. How Many Ways Can You Reach Them? Advertising
TV
Radio
Print
Out of Home
Internet
Yellow Pages
Public Relations
Media Relations
Social Media
Grassroots Marketing & Buzz
66. How Many Ways Can You Reach Them?
67. Communication that Inspires ChangeThank you!