New Media in Health Communication for Development: the Impact of Social Television in Interactive Health Communication (original) (raw)
Social television holds great promise for enhancing health communication across the world, especially Africa. By leveraging the power of social media and interactive broadcasting, health campaigns can reach wider audiences, engage viewers more effectively and contribute to better health outcomes across the continent. The importance of interactive health communication cannot be overstated in modern society. Health information dissemination has, with the explosion of digital technologies, transcended the constraints of time and space, enabling prompt, two-way dialogues between healthcare providers and the public. This paper examines the impact of the application of social television in health communication, investigating its potential to develop and improve the efficacy of health campaigns through interactive and participatory engagement. Drawing upon the Diffusion of Innovations Theory and the Social Cognitive Theory, the study provides a comprehensive analysis of how social television can influence health behaviours and outcomes. The findings suggest that social television's real-time feedback, personalised messaging and enhanced audience engagement position it as a critical tool for future health campaigns. However, challenges such as misinformation, privacy concerns and the balance between entertainment and educational value must be addressed. The paper concludes with a call to action for stakeholders to leverage the potential of social television and recommendations for strategic integration, audience engagement, content accuracy, privacy and security and ongoing research.