Hay Jennifer L, Orom Heather, Kiviniemi Marc T, Waters Erika A
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA (JLH)
Department of Community Health & Health Behavior, School of Public Health and Health Professions, University at Buffalo, SUNY, New York, NY, USA (HO, MTK)
Med Decis Making. 2015 May;35(4):436-45. doi: 10.1177/0272989X15572827. Epub 2015 Mar 25.
Perceived risk is a central theoretical construct in health behavior research. Participants' "don't know" responses to perceived-risk items (DKPR) are usually excluded from analyses. Yet those who provide such responses may have unique cancer information needs.
The hypotheses that DKPR responding may be due to cancer knowledge deficits or behavioral, skill, and attitudinal antecedents to knowledge deficits (information seeking, numeracy, and self-efficacy, respectively) were explored.
Data from the 2005 Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS; N = 1789), a US population-based survey, and an urban, minority, primary care clinic survey (N = 590) were analyzed. Multivariable logistic regressions were conducted to examine knowledge deficit explanations for responding DKPR to colon cancer risk perception questions (adjusting for demographics and family colorectal cancer history).
Comparative (HINTS) and absolute verbal perceived risk of colon cancer (HINTS, clinic survey), knowledge of colon cancer risks and screening, cancer/health information-seeking behavior and self-efficacy (HINTS), and numeracy (clinic survey).
Greater knowledge of colon cancer prevention and screening, cancer and health information seeking, and numeracy were each associated with lower odds of providing a DKPR response.
The study was cross-sectional, which limits the ability to infer causal direction. The use of existing data sets limited our variable choices. Other plausible hypotheses may also explain DKPR responding.
People who report that they don't know their colon cancer risk may have low cancer knowledge and reduced knowledge acquisition behaviors and skills. Health behavior research could benefit from including data concerning DKPR responses to risk perception questions, because individuals who respond in this way may require interventions to address potential cancer risk knowledge deficits.
感知风险是健康行为研究中的核心理论概念。参与者对感知风险项目给出的“不知道”回答(DKPR)通常在分析中被排除。然而,给出此类回答的人可能有独特的癌症信息需求。
探讨DKPR回答可能是由于癌症知识不足,或知识不足的行为、技能和态度前因(分别为信息寻求、数字运算能力和自我效能感)的假设。
分析了来自2005年美国全国健康信息趋势调查(HINTS;N = 1789)的数据,该调查以美国人口为基础,还分析了一项城市少数族裔初级保健诊所调查(N = 590)的数据。进行多变量逻辑回归,以检验对结肠癌风险感知问题回答DKPR的知识不足解释(调整人口统计学和家族结直肠癌病史)。
结肠癌的比较(HINTS)和绝对言语感知风险(HINTS、诊所调查)、结肠癌风险和筛查知识、癌症/健康信息寻求行为和自我效能感(HINTS)以及数字运算能力(诊所调查)。
对结肠癌预防和筛查的更多了解、癌症和健康信息寻求以及数字运算能力,均与给出DKPR回答的较低几率相关。
该研究为横断面研究,这限制了推断因果方向的能力。使用现有数据集限制了我们的变量选择。其他合理假设也可能解释DKPR回答。
报告不知道自己患结肠癌风险的人可能癌症知识水平较低,且知识获取行为和技能有所减少。健康行为研究可能会受益于纳入有关对风险感知问题的DKPR回答的数据,因为以这种方式回答的个体可能需要干预措施来解决潜在的癌症风险知识不足问题。