This article reviews why SARS received so much media attention in Norway, beginning with descriptions of the dynamics and dilemmas faced in health risk communication from the point of view of medical experts and generalist journalists. How the Norwegian media covered SARS is then described and analysed in relation to these risk communication dynamics and dilemmas. Based on the description and short analysis, connotations of the main narratives in the different phases of the SARS outbreak are then discussed. In the conclusion, the nature of SARS itself is used to explain the enormous exposure it received and the massive fear it created in Norway compared to the meagre medical damages it produced there
Conference Theme; East Meets West: Expanding Frontiers and DiversityIn 2003 the SARS coronavirus see...
This study examines how the three most influential local newspapers in Sweden, Helsingborgs Dagblad,...
A quantitative analysis of newspaper coverage of SARS was conducted, where the occurrence of the wor...
This is an electronic version of an article published in the Journal of Risk Research © 2009 Copyrig...
This study analyzed headlines in three influential newspapers to assess how those publications exerc...
Infectious disease is far more than its biological components alone - it is experienced, often indir...
In the Spring of 2003, there was a huge interest in the global news media following the emergence of...
Since the emergence of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, social scientists and sociologists of health and illne...
The study analyzes how a selection of Norwegian newspapers represented the swine flu in two critical...
The article raises the problem of the destructive impact of the infodemic phenomenon on the life of ...
The risk perception as presented by the media is important because it is usually through the media ...
News carries a unique signifying power, a power to represent events in particular ways (Fairclough, ...
With increased globalisation comes the likelihood that infectious disease appearing in one country w...
This chapter explores how newspapers in Denmark and Norway both verbally and visually framed and per...
AbstractMediawatch: Lethal virus outbreaks may help sell newspapers but Bernard Dixon finds that the...
Conference Theme; East Meets West: Expanding Frontiers and DiversityIn 2003 the SARS coronavirus see...
This study examines how the three most influential local newspapers in Sweden, Helsingborgs Dagblad,...
A quantitative analysis of newspaper coverage of SARS was conducted, where the occurrence of the wor...
This is an electronic version of an article published in the Journal of Risk Research © 2009 Copyrig...
This study analyzed headlines in three influential newspapers to assess how those publications exerc...
Infectious disease is far more than its biological components alone - it is experienced, often indir...
In the Spring of 2003, there was a huge interest in the global news media following the emergence of...
Since the emergence of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, social scientists and sociologists of health and illne...
The study analyzes how a selection of Norwegian newspapers represented the swine flu in two critical...
The article raises the problem of the destructive impact of the infodemic phenomenon on the life of ...
The risk perception as presented by the media is important because it is usually through the media ...
News carries a unique signifying power, a power to represent events in particular ways (Fairclough, ...
With increased globalisation comes the likelihood that infectious disease appearing in one country w...
This chapter explores how newspapers in Denmark and Norway both verbally and visually framed and per...
AbstractMediawatch: Lethal virus outbreaks may help sell newspapers but Bernard Dixon finds that the...
Conference Theme; East Meets West: Expanding Frontiers and DiversityIn 2003 the SARS coronavirus see...
This study examines how the three most influential local newspapers in Sweden, Helsingborgs Dagblad,...
A quantitative analysis of newspaper coverage of SARS was conducted, where the occurrence of the wor...