January 6, 2022
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. β With the omicron variant sweeping the globe, COVID-19 continues to make headlines.
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Flashback to March 2020, when news about the virus was spreading rapidly, women in Appalachia were gathering information about prevention efforts and acting quickly with what resources they had. These women provided homemade masks for themselves, their families and the community.
Thatβs according to East Tennessee State University professors Dr. Melanie B. Richards and Dr. Mildred F. Perreault, who have provided important analysis when it comes to health communication.
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Their findings, featured in βSurvive & Thrive: A Journal for Medical Humanities and Narrative as Medicine,β were published in 2021. Interviewing 15 women between March and August 2020, the study helps researchers better understand the individual and social aspects of mask-making, as well as mask advocacy during the pandemic.
βOur findings,β wrote Richards and Perreault, βsupport that mask-making and the sharing of narrative images during this time period established feelings of self-efficacy within a chaotic environment, allowed them to express their identity within the crisis and provided an opportunity for both public health advocacy and community care through craft.β
Both professors are members of the Department of Media and Communication at ETSU. Richards, associate chair of the department, is a co-author of the departmentβs published work on an experiential approach to teaching and student learning, the Applied Marketing & Media Education Norm.
Perreault, an assistant professor, has expertise in local journalism and crisis communication and is the advisor to the departmentβs student-led regional publication, βOverlooked in Appalachia.β She has two recent publications related to journalism and COVID-19: βJournalists on COVID-19 Journalism: Communication Ecology of Pandemic Reportingβ and βMetajournalistic Discourse as a Stabilizer within the Journalistic Field: Journalistic Practice in the Covid-19 Pandemic.β
This press release was produced by East Tennessee State University. The views expressed are the author's own.