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Public Health in the Spotlight: Communicating Health Risks (archived webcast) PHSRA0809
Date(s)
Credit
Instructors Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher Anthony Collings Eden Wells, MD, MPH 
Cost No Charge
Availability Register


Description

During the influenza H1N1 outbreak of 2009, health professionals were thrust into the media spotlight and reporters were forced to interpret new scientific information. In this workshop, health professionals will learn to deliver more effective messages to the media about influenza and other public health hazards. Reporters will learn to decode the language used by health professionals when dealing with outbreaks and pandemics.


Target Audience




Presentation 1 (1.25 hours)

How People Think about Health Risks
Presenter: Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher, PhD, Assistant Professor, UM School of Public Health

Presentation 1 focuses on risk communication principles necessary to deliver information to a range of audiences.

Dr. Zikmund-Fisher is a behavioral scientist with expertise in decision psychology, survey research, and behavioral economics. He studies ways to improve risk communication in order to improve health and medical decision making.


Presentation 2 (1.25 hours)

How to Talk to the Media About Health Risks
Anthony Collings, MA, Lecturer, UM Department of Communication Studies

Presentation 2 provides expert strategies for communicating with the media about health risks.

Mr. Collings is a Lecturer and Media Relations/Public Speaking Consultant with clients such as Google and the University of Michigan School of Public Health. He is an Emmy Award-winning journalist with extensive experience as a print and broadcast reporter (Wall St. Journal, AP, Newsweek, CNN).


Presentation 3 (1.25 hours)

Introduction to Public Health, Outbreak Investigations and Influenza
Eden Wells, MD, MPH, Medical Consultant and Epidemiologist, Bureau of Epidemiology, Michigan Department of Community Health

Presentation 3 provides an overview of outbreak investigations with examples specific to influenza.

Dr. Wells’ interests primarily involve emerging infectious disease threats and activities including preparedness planning for potential bioterrorism and pandemic influenza events in Michigan.




Webcast Technical Requirements

Make sure your computer has a high speed connection (DSL or higher), speakers or headphones, Windows Media Player (9.0 or higher) and an internet browser. Use of Microsoft Internet Explorer is strongly recommended. Mac computers must have Windows Media Player in order to view the webcast. This webcast uses Mediasite technology to deliver streaming video, audio and visual aids(slides) synchronized as the presenter speaks. For more information about system requirements, see our web page: http://practice.sph.umich.edu/micphp/Mediasite_webcast_information.php.



This workshop, originally presented on August 26, 2009 at the University of Michigan School of Public Health in Ann Arbor, Michigan, was supported by the Michigan Center for Public Health Preparedness with a Cooperative Agreement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, number U90TP524243-05. The Michigan Public Health Training Center was a co-sponsor.



9/17/2009