To celebrate the 29th annual National Public Health Week from April 1-7, 2024, we’re lifting up five public health campaigns that have helped create safer, stronger, and healthier communities over the last 30 years. Share these stories to support your National Public Health Week communications and highlight why public health matters.
Download the spotlight resource, as well as ready-to-post and customizable carousel graphics below.
PDF: Celebrating National Public Health Week 2024: Campaign Spotlights from the Last 30 Years
Sample Social Media Carousels
Sample Graphics
Click to download the shareable graphics.
Sample Social Media Captions:
- In celebration of National Public Health Week (April 1-7), [@PH_Comms (X)/@Public Health Communications Collaborative (LinkedIn)/the Public Health Communications Collaborative (any other social media platform)] is lifting up 5 #PublicHealth campaigns that have helped create safer, stronger, healthier communities over the last 30 years. Check them out: [Link to 2-page resource] #NPHW Consider accompanying with a carousel of ready-to-post social graphics, linked above.
- In celebration of National Public Health Week (April 1-7), we’re celebrating the #PublicHealth campaigns that have helped create safer, stronger, healthier communities over the last 30 years. Learn more about [Campaign Name] by [Organization]. #NPHW Accompanied by a carousel of social graphics, customized by you. Learn more about customizing graphics below.
Instructions to Customize Your Social Media Graphics
Use these instructions to customize your National Public Health Week social media graphics.
- Create a free Canva account, if you don’t have one already. You will need one to edit the graphics.
- Follow the hyperlink below to access the editable graphic template. On the page that opens, you’ll click the purple “Use template” button to start editing.
- Use this instructional guide to customize the Public Health Impact graphics with your organization’s logo and highlights.
- When editing is complete, click “File” then “Download” in the top left to download the graphic to share on your social media channels and other communications platforms.
For additional resources and evidence-based messaging guidance, visit the following PHCC webpages: