Hear together

This paper presents Hear Together, a pilot communication campaign on age-related hearing loss by four final-year undergraduates from the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Hearing loss is an issue that affects over half of the population...

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Main Authors: Lim, Gladys Cheng Hui, Yeo, Justin Wei Min, Soh, Juliana Li Jing, Koh, Faith Joyce Wyue Enn
Other Authors: -
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137516
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author Lim, Gladys Cheng Hui
Yeo, Justin Wei Min
Soh, Juliana Li Jing
Koh, Faith Joyce Wyue Enn
author2 -
author_facet -
Lim, Gladys Cheng Hui
Yeo, Justin Wei Min
Soh, Juliana Li Jing
Koh, Faith Joyce Wyue Enn
author_sort Lim, Gladys Cheng Hui
collection NTU
description This paper presents Hear Together, a pilot communication campaign on age-related hearing loss by four final-year undergraduates from the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Hearing loss is an issue that affects over half of the population aged above 60 in Singapore. Based on our research findings, social influence is a factor that affects elderly intention to screen. As such, Hear Together targets informal caregivers aged 21 to 59, such as family and friends to help influence those aged above 60 to attend a hearing screening. Hear Together sought to address informal caregivers’ knowledge gaps regarding age-related hearing loss, while improving their attitudes and perceived norms towards hearing screenings. Campaign tactics such as a web comic series, screening testimonials, expert videos and a Facebook livestream were created to achieve these objectives. 10 pop-up booths were held in Bedok to encourage sign-ups for hearing screenings. The campaign, conducted between January and March 2020 managed to get 109 elderly to attend a hearing screening, of which 52 were influenced by their caregivers. Hear Together also improved knowledge levels by 9.8%, attitudes by 3.3% and perceived norms by 3.4%. Based on the learnings from the campaign, a recommendation for future similar initiatives is to investigate the influence of convenience and cost in influencing hearing screening uptake in the elderly. Campaign sustainability initiatives with partners such as Changi General Hospital and The Singapore Association for the Deaf will also be discussed in this paper.
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spelling ntu-10356/1375162022-07-14T06:11:30Z Hear together Lim, Gladys Cheng Hui Yeo, Justin Wei Min Soh, Juliana Li Jing Koh, Faith Joyce Wyue Enn - Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Ferdinand de Bakker fdebakker@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns This paper presents Hear Together, a pilot communication campaign on age-related hearing loss by four final-year undergraduates from the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Hearing loss is an issue that affects over half of the population aged above 60 in Singapore. Based on our research findings, social influence is a factor that affects elderly intention to screen. As such, Hear Together targets informal caregivers aged 21 to 59, such as family and friends to help influence those aged above 60 to attend a hearing screening. Hear Together sought to address informal caregivers’ knowledge gaps regarding age-related hearing loss, while improving their attitudes and perceived norms towards hearing screenings. Campaign tactics such as a web comic series, screening testimonials, expert videos and a Facebook livestream were created to achieve these objectives. 10 pop-up booths were held in Bedok to encourage sign-ups for hearing screenings. The campaign, conducted between January and March 2020 managed to get 109 elderly to attend a hearing screening, of which 52 were influenced by their caregivers. Hear Together also improved knowledge levels by 9.8%, attitudes by 3.3% and perceived norms by 3.4%. Based on the learnings from the campaign, a recommendation for future similar initiatives is to investigate the influence of convenience and cost in influencing hearing screening uptake in the elderly. Campaign sustainability initiatives with partners such as Changi General Hospital and The Singapore Association for the Deaf will also be discussed in this paper. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2020-03-31T06:31:38Z 2020-03-31T06:31:38Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137516 en CS/19/022 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns
Lim, Gladys Cheng Hui
Yeo, Justin Wei Min
Soh, Juliana Li Jing
Koh, Faith Joyce Wyue Enn
Hear together
title Hear together
title_full Hear together
title_fullStr Hear together
title_full_unstemmed Hear together
title_short Hear together
title_sort hear together
topic Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137516
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