http://www.latimes.com/features/health/la-he-media13nov13,1,5874234.story?coll=la-headlines-health
(Note: since this story was published, the LA Times has made several
corrections, which I have posted
below the entire story. Frank Baker, media educator)
Prime time to learn (science)
In law dramas, medical shows and comedies, science is invading TV story
lines. Good thing they try to get it right.
By Susan Brink
Times Staff Writer
November 13, 2006
AMERICANS more than just
believe the health information they get from
fictional television shows. Spurred by what they see on shows like "ER" or
"The Bold and the Beautiful," surveys suggest, they take action. They go to
the doctor. They tell a friend to have that cough checked. They ask a lover
to use a condom.
Fans develop trusting relationships with the characters who come into their
homes each week, and industry insiders can't betray that trust. "I'm aware
of the number of people who are paying attention to the facts around the
fiction," says Jan Nash, executive producer of "Without a Trace." Thanks in
part to the Internet, where health sites consistently rank at the top of
those most visited, more and more viewers know when something doesn't ring
true.
They're getting a lot of chances to make such calls. Science is invading
scripts. Disease is increasingly a backdrop to plots. The woes of the
nation's healthcare system are punch lines. Heroic characters have mental
diseases or incurable neurological disorders.
And behind the scenes, a body of communications research and an eager
network of health and policy advocates are working with writers and
producers to get the facts right. The shows milking medicine for back
stories or main plot lines aren't limited to the medical genre such as "ER,"
"Grey's Anatomy" or "Scrubs." Sick, damaged or dying characters are showing
up in shows about crime, politics, the legal profession, or wacky families
and friends.
But seeing how profoundly true prime-time television can be was a shock,
nonetheless, for Robert T. Brennan, a statistician at the Harvard School of
Medicine and his daughter, Emma Brennan-Wydra, 13. On Jan. 3, 2006, they
thought the night was winding down like hundreds of others, just another
evening of TV viewing in their Somerville, Mass., home. It was 10 p.m., and
Emma, a devotee of "Law & Order," was curled up watching the episode
"Infected" with her father. "No popcorn. Nothing special, just uneventful
viewing," says Brennan.
Little did they know, within their pajama-clad coziness on the other side of
the country, that they were about to get an insider's glimpse into one of
the latest trends in Hollywood.
Brennan and his daughter sat, mesmerized as the crime drama got closer and
closer to home. It was about a grammar school-aged boy who, after seeing his
mother shot to death, killed her murderer and went on trial as an adult.
"Annie Potts is addressing the jury," Brennan says, still amazed that his
study, published in the May 27, 2005, journal Science, was quoted, statistic
by statistic, by actress Potts, who played the boy's defense attorney,
Sophie Devere. "She talked about kids being two to three times more likely
to commit gun violence after they've been exposed to gun violence." As the
character gave closing arguments, she referred to Science, gave the number
of study participants and said the research took place in Chicago. There was
no doubt. She was talking about Brennan's study.
"Emma and I looked at each other in total disbelief. Literally, I was
flushed and my hair was standing up on my neck. The exact details of the
study were on television," says Brennan. "And the accuracy of it was really
amazing. I hate to say this, but it was more accurate than anything I've
ever had covered in a newspaper."
His research ended up on the airwaves after Dr. Neal Baer, pediatrician and
executive producer of "Law & Order: SVU," read the study on childhood
violence by Brennan and coauthors Jeffrey Bingenheimer and Felton Earls.
With all due respect, the paper was "wonky policy stuff, research that
almost nobody reads," says Baer. But for a doctor who is also a television
writer, it triggered an idea for a plot. "Just as you're exposed to flu when
someone sneezes on you, this boy was exposed to violence. He was infected,
and he committed a violent act," Baer says of his TV character.
What Baer did with a dry study illustrates the challenge to television
writers: Take timely, important topics and make them entertaining. Accuracy
and responsibility matter, industry insiders say, but their job is to
attract and hold television viewers, not lecture or teach.
"Ultimately, our responsibility is to the drama of the show," says Nash. If
writers start getting preachy, she says, viewers will hit the button on the
remote.
At a time when reliance on traditional news media is slipping, entertainment
communication becomes an important health issue. Prime-time television is
where Americans gather, and it's where they learn. It makes sense to put the
information where people are likely to get it.
The emphasis on the human and emotional drama behind the science, it turns
out, is exactly what helps messages stick with viewers, according to
communications research. Movies have a powerful effect too, but television
fans come to know the characters they watch each week. Done well, the
messages play out in the lives of familiar characters, and viewers learn
something.
Premiering a theory
One of the first proofs that popular shows can educate large numbers of
people came in 1977, in Mexico. Broadcast pioneer Miguel Sabido decided to
make use of a classic learning theory, called social cognitive learning, in
a soap opera. The theory, developed by Stanford social scientist Albert
Bandura in 1961, holds that one way people learn is from watching others,
particularly if they identify with the people and observe long enough to see
a successful outcome. Sabido's
telenovela was called "Acompaρame," or
"Accompany Me." The characters, including a poor but strong young woman who
had two children and didn't want any more, grappled with family planning.
In its first year, it was apparent that the people who listened also learned
and acted. The Mexican government's National Population Council reported
that monthly phone calls requesting family planning information increased
from next to none to 500. Contraceptive sales increased 23% the first year
the show aired, compared with an increase of 7% the previous year.
Following Mexico's success, the entertainment-education movement spread to
India, China and Africa, where people in even the most remote villages tune
their portable radios to soap operas. Characters routinely deal with the
reality of AIDS. "You put up a billboard saying 'AIDS Kills, Use a Condom,'
and it doesn't tell a woman how to approach her husband to talk about
condoms," says Sonny Fox, whose Studio City consulting company works
internationally to advise media and public health advocates. "In a radio
drama, you put that right into the story. The listener has to be able to
say, 'If she can do it, I can do it.' "
At a recent workshop in Johannesburg, South Africa, a survey presented Nov.
6 by researchers from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
examined the effect of one such program. It found that reported condom use
during the last sexual encounter increased from 34% among people who did not
tune into a soap opera called "Tsha Tsha" to 60% among those who watched 10
or more of the programs.
Third World successes got the attention of the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. If people in poor countries learn from radio and
television entertainment shows, maybe Americans would too.
The CDC analyzed U.S. health survey data in 1999. Researchers concluded that
of the 38 million Americans who regularly watch daytime soap operas, almost
half said they learned something about diseases and how to prevent them.
Even better, about a third of viewers said they took some action based on
what they saw on a soap opera, including 7% who visited a doctor and 6% who
did something to prevent a health problem.
A year later, the CDC looked at prime-time television. It found that of
Americans who tuned in twice a week or more, 52% said they trusted the
health information they see to be accurate, and 26% said that prime-time TV
was among their top three sources for health information.
Inspiring ideas, facts
Inspired by such research, health advocates are figuring out how to work
with entertainment television, without raising the hackles of creative
types. The Kaiser Family Foundation and CBS and Viacom, for example, hold
annual briefings in which writers and producers hear the real-life stories
of people living with HIV.
Writers listen, awaiting the muse. And advocates cross their fingers, hoping
that truth morphs into broadcast fiction.
Just such a briefing sparked the imagination of Nash and Greg Walker,
executive producers of "Without a Trace." "We heard these testimonials, and
we were moved by the accounts," says Walker. Adds Nash, "We would drive home
and think, 'We have to figure out a way to do this.' " In the 2005 HIV-AIDS
briefing, they heard the true story of Jennifer Jako, a pregnant
HIV-positive woman who felt the judgment of people who thought she shouldn't
have risked passing the virus to her child.
Her story inspired an April 13, 2006, episode called "Expectations," about a
pregnant HIV-positive woman who resents the judgmental comments of a nurse,
who tells her she should never have gotten pregnant. The character
disappears shortly before her baby is due. The suspense builds as the
missing woman calls from her cellphone to say she is in labor. She needs a
cesarean section, and she needs it
now.
To get the AIDS facts straight, Nash and Walker worked with Tina Hoff,
director of the Media Entertainment Program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
"We're not the creative visionaries," Hoff says. "But once a story line is
developed, we can help ensure that it's accurate."
In reality, the baby of an HIV-infected mother has a less than 2% chance of
being born with the disease provided the mother has taken appropriate
medications during pregnancy and the delivery is cesarean. If the audience
didn't know that before they saw the show, they did after.
In the show, the woman was found in time to deliver a healthy baby by
cesarean section. In real life, Jako gave birth C-section of course to a
healthy daughter in July.
The influence of a popular television show can make physicians' everyday
advice pale, says Dr. Mark Morocco, an emergency room physician who was a
technical advisor to "ER." "I might see 20 to 30 people a day," he says on
his morning shift at the real emergency department of Brotman Medical Center
in Culver City. "A show like 'ER' at one time was reaching 30 million people
a week. You just can't beat that for power."
The magnitude of the impact of that one show was measured in classic studies
by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the CDC. They surveyed "ER" viewers
before and after specific episodes. One episode included a vignette on date
rape. The victim was advised that she could take a morning-after pill to
prevent pregnancy. Before it aired, the study found that only 10% of viewers
were aware that high-dose birth control pills were an option to prevent
pregnancy. In the week after the episode aired, 33% of viewers were aware of
the morning-after option. Another episode dealt with HPV as a cause of
cervical cancer, and before the show ran, 24% of "ER" viewers knew about HPV.
A week after the show aired, 47% said they had heard of HPV.
"That research reinforced that you just can't ignore the role of
entertainment media in people's lives," says Hoff.
Such studies have encouraged shows to use the expertise of real doctors to
go deeper than helping actors correctly pronounce medical words, or showing
them how to attach electrocardiographic leads. Morocco helped the show's
writers figure out how to write Anthony Edwards, who played Dr. Mark Greene
on "ER," out of the script after Edwards announced he'd be leaving the show.
"What could we give him that would be accurate, that could kill him in 15
months?" says Morocco. The answer: glioblastoma, an aggressive brain tumor
whose sufferers have a life expectancy of about 18 months.
Viewers watched, week after week, the dramatic arc of Dr. Greene's
diagnosis, treatment success, relapse and decline. "We were able to show
what people with a bad brain tumor really go through," Morocco says. "How it
affects your family, the real roller coaster ride you're on when you get
this kind of diagnosis." Until, finally, the fictional Dr. Greene died, in
the May 9, 2002, episode.
Premiering this week may be one of the most intense efforts to get the
science right. A new series, "3 Lbs.," named for the weight of the average
human brain, is about two neurosurgeons. The pilot shows symptoms, brain
scans and neurosurgery wrapped around the lives of two patients shocked that
their brains have gone haywire. "It's all research-based," says executive
producer Peter Ocko. "There's not a neurological condition we deal with
that's not documented in research. We consult with two neurosurgeons. We
gather case histories. There's a doctor and a nurse on the set for every
medical moment. And we do just as much research on the patient's
perspective." From there, poetic license comes in.
Even nonmedical shows are hiring researchers whose job it is to ferret out
what's new and true in multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's disease,
obsessive-compulsive disorder, cancer, diabetes or even policy issues such
as the growing number of uninsured Americans or the vast disparity between
donated organs and the need for organ transplants. All those topics have
made their way into recent prime-time shows.
Hollywood insiders
The effort to educate while entertaining goes beyond doctors and staff
researchers working within television.
The granddaddy of the industry-science collaboration is probably the
Entertainment Industries Council, started in 1983, just about the time John
Belushi died of a drug overdose and Richard Pryor set himself ablaze
freebasing cocaine. Created to promote health and social issues via
entertainment, the council first tackled drug abuse. It quickly expanded.
"We're the folks who got actors to put their seat belts on for driving
scenes," says Larry Deutchman, executive vice president of marketing and
industry relations for the council.
Now there is a growing industry in Hollywood made up of advocates who are
neither entertainers nor insiders, but who want their disease or issue to
get dramatic play before a mass audience. Similar to product placement, it's
a kind of ideas placement. A group called the Entertainment Professionals
Resource Assn. pulls dozens of these groups together, including the American
Cancer Society, Down Syndrome in Arts and Media, the American Heart Assn.
and the Mental Health Media Partnership.
"We're trying to shift the norm," says Deborah Glik, director of the UCLA
Health and Media Research Group, who is affiliated with the entertainment
group. "When you're going to portray a health issue anyway, and you're
working with a platform that reaches millions of people, you should do it
accurately."
Members make themselves available with scientific facts and a bank of real
citizens willing to tell their stories. They carefully push their causes,
knowing they walk a delicate line between sparking creativity and triggering
annoyance.
David Sampson, director of media relations at the American Cancer Society,
has learned that it's better if his organization stays away from pitching
specific plots. Policy wonks, it turns out, aren't so good at recognizing
the germ of a compelling story line. "Writers come to us," he says, "and
almost invariably, they'll pick up on some bit of information that we had no
intention of relaying."
But the society doesn't hesitate to advise, when asked. When Alexis on the
soap opera "General Hospital" was diagnosed with lung cancer despite being a
nonsmoker, Sampson heard that writers wanted to attribute her disease to
asbestos exposure. "About 4,000 non-smokers a year come down with lung
cancer," he says. "But short of working in a mine, you only get lung cancer
from asbestos exposure if you're also a smoker." Exposure to second-hand
smoke, the society suggested, was a far better explanation.
The idea is to present entertainment insiders with powerful real stories,
inundate them with facts, and then sit back and hope the creative juices
take over. "I believe the writer is king or queen," says Lisa Allen,
director of the Media Project, which provides entertainment industry
professionals with information on reproductive issues. "We don't preach, we
don't proselytize."
But sometimes, when the people who understand the power of the medium watch
TV, they do a slow burn. Glik recalls one of those moments. She was watching
a prime-time drama in which a character had hepatitis. "I got so upset," she
says. "They should have talked about immunizations. It was a missed
opportunity."
Missed opportunities and programs that are just plain wrong persist. Soap
opera characters can still come out of comas as though they simply took a
long nap. Prime-time shows can still depict death as though it's as quick
and painless as fainting.
And while television may have become more daring in portraying how disease
affects real people, network television pulls its punches on some
controversial topics. Abortion, for example, has become more taboo over the
years. In 1972, Maude, played by Bea Arthur, had an abortion, a decision
that unfolded over two episodes on the sitcom "Maude," watched by 65 million
viewers. Thirty years later, Claire Fisher, played by actress Lauren Ambrose
on the HBO drama "Six Feet Under," whose viewership peaked at 5 million, had
an abortion. In between the two shows, almost all unplanned television
pregnancies ended either in miscarriage, adoption or a decision to keep the
baby.
No issue unaired
But because truth can be stranger, and more entertaining, than fiction,
increasingly even the most tedious of topics the economics of the
healthcare delivery system, for example are finding their way onto the
airwaves. What "Friends" fan will ever forget the time that Joey, an
aspiring actor, faced losing his health coverage, an all too real dilemma
for 46 million Americans? In the Oct. 14, 1999, episode, Joey's coverage
through the Screen Actors Guild was going to lapse unless he chalked up more
work hours. Then he got a hernia, the pain of which required treatment but
also interfered with his ability to work the hours he needed to remain
insured.
Joey does solve his problem, recalls Kate Langrall Folb of Nightingale
Entertainment, who works to get stories on health policy, including the
uninsured, onto television shows. "He gets a gig portraying a dying guy in
pain," she says. He earned his hours, kept his insurance and got his hernia
treated.
It was, after all, television. Everything must be tidied up within 30 to 60
minutes.
susan.brink@latimes.com
|
 |
 |
 |
| The show that public health advocates
always mention as a eureka moment for the power of television as a
social force was "Happy Days." In an episode that aired Sept. 27,
1977, Fonzie got a library card and declared reading to be "cool." |
Bea
Arthur played Maude in the sitcom of the same name. As a 40-year-old
married woman, her character had an unplanned pregnancy and decided
to have an abortion. |
"ER" premiered, set in a busy, urban emergency room. The show took
viewers beyond the familiar emotional drama of earlier medical shows
such as "Dr. Kildaire" and "Ben Casey" and deep into medical
complexity. |
|
 |
 |
 |
|
The
4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital, a.k.a. "M*A*S*H," arguably
gave viewers their first fictionalized view of operating suite
reality, set in a military unit during the Korean War. |
Rose, played by Betty White, left, had an HIV scare on "Golden
Girls." Before then, the virus was largely perceived by the public
as affecting gay men, drug users and, maybe, promiscuous young
people certainly not retired widows. |
It was revealed that President Bartlet, played by Martin Sheen, had
multiple sclerosis. The National MS Society praised the "The West
Wing" for depicting a person with the disease living with "the hope
for a continued productive life." |
|
 |
 |
|
|
On "Monk," a detective with a
photographic memory suffers intensified
obsessive-compulsive disorder after the unsolved murder
of his wife. Adrian Monk, on psychiatric leave from the
San Francisco Police Department, works as a freelance
consultant, solving every crime that comes his way. Monk
is the first series lead character whose mental illness
is as much the star as he is.
|
|
|
Psychotherapy got a boost when mobster
Tony Soprano sought treatment for panic attacks.
Lorraine Bracco, who plays Dr. Jennifer Melfi, his
therapist on "The Sopranos," showed Freud's talking cure
as it actually happens weekly, over a period of years.
It was so accurate, and so long-awaited by the
much-mocked profession, that the American Psychoanalytic
Assn. invited her to speak at its 2001 annual meeting.
Hundreds of psychiatrists and psychologists gave her a
standing ovation.
|
|
|
Medical milestones on TV
The show that public health advocates always mention as a eureka moment
for the power of television as a social force was "Happy Days." In an
episode that aired Sept. 27, 1977, Fonzie got a library card and declared
reading to be "cool." Legend has it that in the days following the show,
demand for library cards skyrocketed, though the American Library Assn. says
no such national records are kept.
Some memorable moments in the portrayal of health and medicine on the
small screen:
1952 Lucy Ricardo, played by a pregnant Lucille Ball on "I Love
Lucy," became the first television character to be shown as pregnant at a
time when real-life pregnant women were discreet about being seen in public.
1967 Raymond Burr played a detective paralyzed in an assassination
attempt in "Ironside." He refused to accept his disability as the end of his
career, and continued to fight crime as a special consultant to the San
Francisco Police Department becoming the first prime-time character
reliant on a wheelchair.
1972 The 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital, a.k.a. "M*A*S*H,"
arguably gave viewers their first fictionalized view of operating suite
reality, set in a military unit during the Korean War.
1972 Bea Arthur played Maude in the sitcom of the same name. As a
40-year-old married woman, her character had an unplanned pregnancy and
decided to have an abortion.
1986 "Hill Street Blues" became the first crime drama to air a show
with an HIV plot line.
1989 Chris Burke, who has Down's syndrome, played Corky Thatcher, a
character with Down's on the show "Life Goes On." Not only was it the first
time a character with Down's had a recurring role, it was one of the first
times an actor with a disability played a character with that disability.
1990 Nancy, played by Patricia Wettig, was diagnosed with ovarian
cancer on "thirty- something." Viewers were unaccustomed to confronting a
gravely ill character in a weekly drama, and were greatly upset that a story
line might force them to watch her get sicker, or even die.
1990 Rose, played by Betty White, had an HIV scare on "Golden
Girls." Before then, the virus was largely perceived by the public as
affecting gay men, drug users and, maybe, promiscuous young people
certainly not retired widows.
1994 "ER" premiered, set in a busy, urban emergency room. The show
took viewers beyond the familiar emotional drama of earlier medical shows
such as "Dr. Kildaire" and "Ben Casey" and deep into medical complexity.
2000 It was revealed that President Bartlet, played by Martin Sheen,
had multiple sclerosis. The National MS Society praised the "The West Wing"
for depicting a person with the disease living with "the hope for a
continued productive life."
2001 Anne Heche played a teacher with Tourette's syndrome on "Ally
McBeal." When the character got a leg tic while driving and ran over her
boyfriend, leading to a manslaughter charge, some advocacy groups protested
that the show made it appear that people with Tourette's were unsafe behind
the wheel.
2002 On "Monk," a detective with a photographic memory suffers
intensified obsessive-compulsive disorder after the unsolved murder of his
wife. Adrian Monk, on psychiatric leave from the San Francisco Police
Department, works as a freelance consultant, solving every crime that comes
his way. Monk is the first series lead character whose mental illness is as
much the star as he is.
2005 George and Angie, in an October episode of the sitcom "The
George Lopez Show," were shocked when their teenage daughter said she wanted
to marry her boyfriend and have a baby so that they could be together. Her
announcement forced an on-air discussion of teen sex. The show got an award
from USC's Hollywood Health and Society for its realistic portrayal of teen
sexuality concerns.
2006 Sarah, played by Rachel Griffiths, must get used to giving
insulin shots to her young daughter, Paige, played by Kerris Dorsey, after
the girl is diagnosed with diabetes on "Brothers and Sisters." With cases of
diabetes among children and adults reaching epidemic proportions, it is the
first time a prime time TV family has to deal with it in an ongoing story
line.
-- Susan Brink