Amplification Chambers and Belief Persistence in Commercial Health Communication
Beliefs about health interventions often persist despite a heterogeneous or predominantly null evidence base. While prior research has emphasized misinformation, less attention has been given to how belief persistence can emerge in environments where circulating information is largely accurate. This article develops a process model explaining how health communication environments shape the visibility, interpretation, and reinforcement of scientific evidence in commercially relevant domains. The model identifies three mechanisms: selective representation of evidence, interpretive asymmetry between positive and null findings, and reinforcement through multi-channel communication involving media, commercial messaging, and digital platforms.
A content analysis of 137 English-language media articles comparing coverage of the REDUCE-IT trial with the contemporaneous VITAL trial identifies systematic asymmetries. The positive finding received over four times greater effective visibility, was framed as a breakthrough in most articles, and was more frequently linked to commercial communication. Null findings were more often contextualized and associated with methodological caveats.
The article introduces the concept of amplification chambers to describe health communication environments in which accurate evidence circulates but asymmetries in prominence and repetition stabilize interpretations that diverge from the broader evidence base. These findings suggest that distortions in public understanding may arise from structural features of communication systems rather than from misinformation alone.
A content analysis of 137 English-language media articles comparing coverage of the REDUCE-IT trial with the contemporaneous VITAL trial identifies systematic asymmetries. The positive finding received over four times greater effective visibility, was framed as a breakthrough in most articles, and was more frequently linked to commercial communication. Null findings were more often contextualized and associated with methodological caveats.
The article introduces the concept of amplification chambers to describe health communication environments in which accurate evidence circulates but asymmetries in prominence and repetition stabilize interpretations that diverge from the broader evidence base. These findings suggest that distortions in public understanding may arise from structural features of communication systems rather than from misinformation alone.
Publisert i Journal of health communication, 2026
Les artikkelen her