Home
E-Submission
Sitemap
Contact Us
ABOUT
Aims and scope
About the journal
About the publisher
Editorial board
Best practice
Open access
Readership
Metrics
Contact us
ARTICLES AND ISSUES
Current issue
All issues
Ahead-of print
Article category
Most view
Most download
Most cited
Funded articles
Author index
EDITORIAL POLICIES
Publication ethics
Peer review policy
Advertising policy
Data sharing policy
FOR CONTRIBUTORS
Instruction for authors
E-Submission
Author’s checklist
Copyright transfer agreement
Article-processing charge
Submission guidelines
Search
Search
Page Path
HOME
Search
Original Articles
Communicating Zika at the wake of the epidemic : a content analysis of the U.S. newspaper coverage of Zika virus
Yiyi Yang
Health New Media Res.
2020;4(2):221-245. Published online December 31, 2020
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22720/HNMR.2020.4.2.221
Full text
PubReader
ePub
PDF
1
Health &
New Media
Research
Print ISSN: 2671-4124
Online ISSN: 2951-2522
MOST VIEWED
MOST CITED
12,602
Testing a user engagement model of motivational technology for exercise behavior and postpartum weight management
7,934
Talking about pain plainly: authentic expression of pain management on Reddit
6,363
Health information-seeking behavior and perceived information source credibility among middle-aged and older adults
6,136
Exploring factors influencing attitudes towards COVID-19 prevention measures and compliance with behavioral guidelines
5,914
Evaluating the impact of film on the knowledge of Sickle Cell Disease amongst residents of Obio-Akpor local government area
+more
Cited By
3
Exploring factors influencing attitudes towards COVID-19 prevention measures and compliance with behavioral guidelines
Cited By
3
Enhancing publics’ COVID-19 vaccine advocacy on social media: the role of dialogic government communication
Cited By
2
Balancing independence, collective interests, and media responsibilities: a framing analysis of COVID-19 coverage in the Sydney Morning Herald
Cited By
2
Health information-seeking behavior and perceived information source credibility among middle-aged and older adults
Cited By
1
Trust in social media is associated with misperceptions about COVID-19
+more