Washington University, School of Medicine, Division of Health Behavior Research, St. Louis, MO 63108, USA.
Patient Educ Couns. 2010 Dec;81 Suppl:S15-21. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2010.08.015. Epub 2010 Sep 17.
Compare the immediate affective and cognitive reactions to cancer survivor stories about mammography and breast cancer vs. a didactic, informational approach.
Participants (N=489) were African American women age 40 years and older (mean=61). Most had ≤high school education (67%), annual household income ≤$20,000 (77%), and a prior mammogram (89%). Participants completed surveys before and after watching the narrative or informational video. We used structural equation modeling to examine the large number of inter-related latent constructs.
Women who watched the narrative video experienced more positive and negative emotions, found it easier to understand the video, had more positive evaluations of the video, reported stronger identification with the message source (i.e., perceived similarity, trust, liking), and were more engaged with the video.
Narratives elicited immediate reactions consistent with theorized pathways of how communication affects behavior. Future studies should examine whether and how these immediate outcomes act as mediators of the longer term effects of narratives on affect, cognitions, and behavior.
Stories of other women's experiences may be more powerful than a didactic presentation when encouraging African American women to get a mammogram.
比较癌症幸存者讲述乳房 X 光检查和乳腺癌的故事与说教式、信息性方法对即时情感和认知反应的影响。
参与者(N=489)为年龄在 40 岁及以上的非裔美国女性(平均年龄=61 岁)。大多数人接受过≤高中教育(67%),年收入≤20,000 美元(77%),并接受过乳房 X 光检查(89%)。参与者在观看叙述性或信息性视频前后完成了调查。我们使用结构方程模型来检验大量相互关联的潜在结构。
观看叙述性视频的女性经历了更多的积极和消极情绪,发现更容易理解视频,对视频的评价更积极,对信息源的认同感更强(即感知相似性、信任、喜欢),对视频的参与度更高。
叙述引发了与沟通如何影响行为的理论途径一致的即时反应。未来的研究应该检验这些即时结果是否以及如何作为叙述对情感、认知和行为的长期影响的中介。
当鼓励非裔美国女性进行乳房 X 光检查时,其他女性经历的故事可能比说教式的介绍更有说服力。