STEM Translational Communication Center, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Department of Advertising, College of Journalism and Communications, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Cancer Educ. 2021 Feb;36(1):3-9. doi: 10.1007/s13187-020-01820-3.
Information seeking is an active health behavior that influences cancer fatalism; however, people commonly experience challenges in accessing high-quality and actionable health information that is personally relevant. This is especially common among older and rural adults who have a high cancer risk. The purpose of this study was to examine the theoretical assumption that enhancing perceived confidence to overcome health information seeking challenges will alleviate cancer fatalism. In 2017, 895 adults from a large southeastern medical university's cancer catchment area participated in a random digit dial survey. Participants were Millennials (18-35; 19%), Generation X (36-51; 23%), Baby Boomers (52-70; 40%), and Silent Generation (71-95; 16.9%) who had equal representation across metro (78.9%) and nonmetro (21.1%) counties. Younger generations (Millennials and Generation X) held stronger fatalistic cancer beliefs ("It seems like everything causes cancer," "When I think about cancer, I automatically think about death") than older generations. Most participants believed that precautionary efforts exist to reduce their chances of getting cancer, which was strongest among individuals residing in metro counties. In controlling for generation and geographic residence, individuals who experienced challenges in the process of accessing health information had stronger fatalistic beliefs about cancer prevention; however, this relationship was most pronounced among individuals with confidence to ultimately obtain information that they needed. This study contributes to evidence for health information equity in combatting fatalistic cancer beliefs. Findings have important implications for the optimized dissemination of culturally adapted cancer education and skill-based training to efficiently access and evaluate relevant cancer education.
信息寻求是一种积极的健康行为,会影响癌症宿命论;然而,人们在获取高质量且可付诸行动、与个人相关的健康信息方面通常会遇到挑战。这在年龄较大和居住在农村的成年人中尤为常见,他们患癌症的风险较高。本研究的目的是检验一个理论假设,即增强克服健康信息寻求挑战的信心,将减轻癌症宿命论。2017 年,来自东南部一所大型医科大学癌症集水区的 895 名成年人参加了一项随机数字拨号调查。参与者包括千禧一代(18-35 岁;19%)、X 世代(36-51 岁;23%)、婴儿潮一代(52-70 岁;40%)和沉默一代(71-95 岁;16.9%),他们在地铁(78.9%)和非地铁(21.1%)县的代表性均等。年轻一代(千禧一代和 X 世代)比老一代更相信宿命论的癌症信念(“似乎一切都会致癌”,“当我想到癌症时,我会自动想到死亡”)。大多数参与者认为存在预防措施来降低他们患癌症的几率,这种观点在居住在地铁县的个体中最强。在控制了世代和地理居住因素后,在获取健康信息过程中遇到挑战的个体对癌症预防的宿命论信念更强;然而,这种关系在那些有信心最终获得他们所需信息的个体中最为明显。本研究为对抗宿命论癌症信念的健康信息公平提供了证据。研究结果对优化传播文化适应性癌症教育和基于技能的培训以有效获取和评估相关癌症教育具有重要意义。