
23:56
Yes, the webinar will be recorded and distributed to attendees

25:22
Been there!

25:37
This is blurry

29:59
Please fix the focus

31:28
By sharing the specific PowerPoint presentation rather than the entire computer, the focus will become fixed.

31:49
Whomever is running the Zoom - we see your Outlook notification and cursor movements to open chat, etc.

31:51
Looks like you're sharing your full screen instead of just the slides? Re: Maria's comment about focus(Also thanks I'm really excited about this webinar!)

32:06
when you screen share you can choose to share just you ppt and not your entire screen. this will keep your emails from popping up

32:11
We are seeing the full screen instead of just the slides.

32:40
Hi, we can see everything happening on your screen, not just the window with the presentaiton

32:41
We can see your entire screen including your email notifications and we can see your mouse moving around looking at Q & A etc...

32:41
We see your whole desktop

32:45
WE are able to see everything the person sharing screen is doing, which some times takes away from slides

32:46
Now we can see your desktop

32:46
and all the things you are doing

32:55
We can't see the shared screen

33:02
You are sharing your entire screen not just your power point browser...

33:27
Hi, just an FYI that the slides are showing up a little blurry

33:29
need to reshare only the powerpoint or something

36:54
Apologies, we are working to share the PowerPoint so that it is clearer

37:32
We are no longer seeing speaker slides

37:32
I think the individual that is sharing their screen does not realize they are still doing so? Seeing a lot of movement between what we are looking at.

37:52
no powerpoint slides visible

38:13
any idea why the loss worked for republicans but not democrats?

39:00
need to define what tobacco 21 is

41:33
The host of the meeting should share just the powerpoint presentation application and not their entire screen to prevent the audience (us) from seeing notifications. This also addresses the blurriness.

45:44
Apologies, we are working to share the PowerPoint so that it is clearer

46:41
Are we going to be able to listen to the recording later?

47:36
Still kind of blurry

47:44
Melanie, looking at the time, I want to move directly forward to slide 17 - Framing to Avoid and Framing to Use

47:57
When colleen is done I mean

48:05
I have a question for frameworks institute, do you have a template/model that I can use to answer similar research questions?

48:06
Only on this slide though! The other slides we fine

48:18
was there an evidence base for deciding on the age of 21?

48:55
Isn’t understanding that key to framing?

49:08
Did you use the term "social justice" in San Antonio?

49:12
Great point! Tobacco companies are now getting good at framing ret

49:32
Such a great success story in avoid PUP laws. Thanks Colleen for sharing that example.

49:37
*avoiding

50:05
tobacco retailers as small business and public health efforts as hurting small business.

52:43
how does the lack of efficacy for the economic impacts jibe with the earlier finding that loss works for republicans? please explain.

52:49
Are you going to share the slides?

53:13
this is really good messaging

53:19
Will you share the slides later?

53:29
thank you for showing examples of messages

53:41
Helpful example

54:02
Hi Everyone, yes, we are going to share the slides, recording and contact information. Again, apologies for the disruption with the computer issues and sharing. Thank you for understanding.

54:07
will the recording be shared after this meeting?

54:24
Yes, we will share a recording with all those registered

54:34
This presentation is amazing and is so needed. Thank you!!

55:02
doesn’t the concept of social justice contradict the “individualism” frame

55:20
I agree with Katie Moose ^^^

55:23
very good

55:56
Does oral health test as well as or better than dental health?

56:08
Please share any questions for presenters in the Q&A section

57:31
Are there alternatives to 'justice' and 'equity'? More concrete synonyms?

57:34
How do you work with communities that are reluctant to accept population health data and do not believe that the current OMB race/ethnicity adequately capture the community make up?

58:25
How you do the testing of all the models? online, personal questionaries, other? and how many persons you interviewed? in order to be trusted.

59:34
Great point. so much emphasis placed on individual decisions and actions which leads people to believe that the blame is on individuals when people get sick

59:56
and learning that the environment can change to help, that's a lightbulb moment for communities

01:00:28
Yes @JennHamilton. The industry wants us to think this is an individual user problem!

01:00:39
indeed they do!

01:01:44
FYI Gaston County has the best tobacco-free County policies in NC now

01:02:05
How long is this event scheduled to last?

01:02:08
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=2ahUKEwjH652k5YXvAhU2B50JHW0gAuYQFjAAegQIAhAD&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.naccho.org%2Fuploads%2Ffull-width-images%2FCurrent-LHD-Tobacco-Successes-and-Challenges-2020.pdf&usg=AOvVaw0UTabc4ojxPZGXxDWK30Ij

01:02:16
^^Love the NC rivalry, Alyssa!

01:02:32
Banning smoking in all public places seems like it could backfire in that the accountability is still on historically marginalized groups. can you speak to that?

01:05:27
That longer statement takes so much longer - how do you get people to pay attention to the whole message (outside of a research setting)?

01:05:37
That longer statement takes so much longer - how do you get people to pay attention to the whole message (outside of a research setting)?

01:07:16
Didn’t actually mean for that to be read out loud!

01:08:12
Many state government agencies in "tobacco states" are not allowed to malign the tobacco industry so creative strategies are needed to communicate this way

01:10:21
Great question Ruth. How do we balance providing the full explanation with plain language needs?

01:11:03
We have to be careful to not sound like an excuse is being made as well.

01:12:59
The biggest problem I face in my community whenever there’s an initiative to combat tobacco use and strengthen tobacco control, is the way it’s perceived by the community as infringing on their freedoms, limiting them, and put in the bigger context of historical neglect and marginalization, is seen as a tool for oppression. I’ve noticed that smokers in my community perceive themselves as an oppressed minority, and feel that policies care a lot for non-smokers but don/t care nor accommodate smokers

01:14:47
@Amal those are huge challenges for sure. You might find some resources on countertobacco.org helpful, or this report by the Public Health and Tobacco Policy Center: http://www.tobaccopolicycenter.org/documents/OhSnap.pdf

01:14:51
Will you please enter the Frameworks website link here?

01:15:23
https://www.frameworksinstitute.org/

01:16:30
I think an important nuance when transitioning from passive or active voice (including an actor) in the casual pathway is to do so in a way that conveys compassion and not marginalizing the actor. You did this well with the HCP message, for example, when including the phrase, "absorb stereotypes like ALL of us". It also emphasizes and reinforces that we are all a part of the solution. Such a valuable and powerful message and frame.

01:16:32
You cannot reason someone out of an idea they did not arrive at by reason.

01:17:20
yes

01:17:28
How do you convince people that they need to be a part of big solutions to big problems, such as climate change, when they can’t or won’t see the problem? When they may not see the effects of climate change in their daily lives?

01:17:51
Words that Win also offers training in using the Race Class Narrative messaging framework for a wide range of issues: https://www.mobilize.us/wordsthatwin/

01:18:01
Thank you! great webinar!

01:18:08
Is there any place where I can learn the methodology? ¿is there a book or a document?

01:18:19
and also I think it's helps us recognize that this is a bias we are all potentially carrying with us

01:18:38
we may be all part of the problem but we are all part of the solution :-)

01:19:08
I am the Health Equity and Cancer Control Liaison of the IU Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center (IUSCCC). The IUSCCC is focusing on tobacco control and disparities. I would love to receive the information (tireid@iu.edu) on tobacco disparities to share with my leadership/colleagues.

01:19:27
This is an excellent presentation. Thank you for providing this information.

01:19:30
Thank you for the helpful presentation. Very useful.

01:19:51
yes very good!

01:20:20
Thank you for the great presentation and helpful information and examples!

01:20:21
Could you pop the eval link in the chat now?

01:20:22
Thank you! This was great!

01:20:23
great PRESENTATION & MESSAGE,

01:20:30
Thank you all for this. Very helpful.

01:20:37
http://naccho.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_bJhYpB3LtXvqfCm

01:20:39
Thank you so much for the great presentation ^_^

01:20:42
Thank you!

01:20:42
Thank you! Very helpful

01:20:45
This presentation is SO helpful! Thank you for the follow up resources!!!

01:20:46
Thank you!

01:20:48
don't even worry about it. tech stuff happens!

01:20:51
Thank you! Great job!

01:20:52
Thank you!

01:20:53
Excellent presentation - thank you

01:20:54
Thank you for this wonderful presentation

01:20:54
Thank you!! This was excellent

01:20:54
Please take the evaluation of the webinar here

01:20:54
Wonderful presentation and useful info

01:20:55
Thank you.

01:20:55
http://naccho.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_bJhYpB3LtXvqfCm

01:20:59
thank you and great information!

01:20:59
Thank you!

01:21:01
thank you!

01:21:02
Thank you! It was great :)

01:21:02
thank you

01:21:11
Tks!