Abstract
The Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation launched the Heart Truth campaign to increase women’s awareness of heart disease. However, little is known about how such campaigns intersect with broader understandings of gender and health. This discourse analysis examined the construction of gender, risk, and prevention within campaign material. Two primary discourses emerged: one of acceptable femininity, which outlines whose risk, survivorship, and prevention matters, and another of selfless prevention. Women of diverse ethnic, sexual, and socio-economic background were largely absent. Prevention was portrayed as a personal choice, eclipsing conversations about social determinants of health and the socio-political context of heart disease.
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Clark, M. I., McGannon, K. R., Berry, T. R., Norris, C. M., Rodgers, W. M., & Spence, J. C. (2018). Taking a hard look at the Heart Truth campaign in Canada: A discourse analysis. Journal of Health Psychology, 23(13), 1699–1710. https://doi.org/10.1177/1359105316669581
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