Communication Resources
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Plain Language
🖨️ At-A-Glance Plain Language for Public Health Guide
In this at-a-glance view of the Public Health Communication Collaborative’s Plain Language for Public Health guide, you’ll find plain language best practices to use before you start writing, when you’re organizing your content, while you’re writing, and when you’re reviewing and testing your communications.
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Review + use to help advance your skills in plain language for public health communications.
Added: 04.25.24
💻 Plain Language Guide for Public Health
PHCC's guide to plain language is designed to help communicators share messages that help their audiences find what they need, understand the information they find, + use the information to meet their needs.
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Share to those creating and reviewing content for the general public via newsletters, email, and on websites.
03.06.23
Building Trust in Public Health Communications
🖨️ Building Trust in Public Health Communications
To center trust in your communications, consider the insights and tips in this resource. It can help you reevaluate and refine your communications production approach from planning to execution to evaluation for continuous improvement.
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Review + apply to your health communications
Added: 03.06.24
🧰 Communications Tool: "Building Bridges"
From the Public Health Communications Collaborative, this communications resources helps public health communicators + healthcare providers navigate difficult conversations around vaccines, masking, testing, + more.
INCLUDES:
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Review, bookmark, + practice the tools when engaging with your community. Consider sharing with fellow communicators or healthcare providers
1.24.22
Handling + Responding to Misinformation
🖨️ Practical Playbook for Addressing Health Misinformation
This comprehensive resource from Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security lays out a phased approach to preventing the spread of misinformation:
✔️ Prework: Actions to take before rumors arise
✔️ Step 1: Decide whether to address the rumor
✔️ Step 2: Take action to address misinformation
✔️ Step 3: Evaluate anti-misinformation messages
And it features lots of great stuff: a checklist that breaks down all the key phases and strategies, a message development guide, a truth sandwich worksheet.
🎙️ Available in English
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Bookmark + review to inform your communications
Added: 05.22.24
💻 Using Misinformation Alerts
From the Public Health Communications Collaborative, this resource page updates regularly to report on emerging misinformation, along with recommendations on if + how to address it.
INCLUDES:
Misinformation alerts + recommended responses + reactions
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Bookmark + review regularly
1.31.22
Creating Accessible Communications
🖨️ Accessible Social Media for Public Health
PHCC has developed “The Public Health Communicators Guide to Creating Accessible Social Media” to support public health communicators in crafting accessible writing, visuals, audio, and videos. Use this guide to develop accessible and inclusive social media content that connects with all members of your audience.
🎙️ Available in English
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Bookmark + review to inform your communications
Added: 05.28.24
Archives
🖨️ Archived News Releases
News releases released prior to the current year have been removed from the main VDH website. An archive of those news releases can be found on this page. VPN access required.
📌 This can be found in Communications Resources
💡 Bookmark + reference when needed
Added: 06.04.24