Conceptual Semantics and Public Messaging

"Risk-Benefit" Discourse around COVID-19 Vaccination

Authors

  • Ida Stevia Diget
  • Cliff Goddard

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/sss.v13i1.135082

Keywords:

risk, COVID-19, conceptual semantics, public health communication, vaccine discourse, natural semantic metalanguage (NSM)

Abstract

This study explores the conceptual semantics of risk–benefit discourse about COVID-19 vaccination and the implications for public health messaging. The underlying methodology is the natural semantic metalanguage (NSM) approach. The study proposes a semantic explication of the English word risk in one of its most frequently used frames in COVID-19 vaccine discourse (i.e. the risk of ...), as well as an “advice script” for the complex task of “weighing the risks and benefits” of a vaccination decision. Drawing on COVID-19 vaccination campaigns in Australia and Denmark, the study stresses the difficulties of communicating public health messages using conceptually complex and culture-specific words such as risk. Though the issues are complex, it is argued that adopting a minimal languages approach may provide a way forward, by enabling the creation of texts that are both easier to understand and more easily translated.

 

Published

2022-12-14

How to Cite

Diget, I. S., & Goddard, C. (2022). Conceptual Semantics and Public Messaging: "Risk-Benefit" Discourse around COVID-19 Vaccination. Scandinavian Studies in Language, 13(1), 303–331. https://doi.org/10.7146/sss.v13i1.135082