Thainiyom Prawit, Elder Katherine
PhD Candidate, Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA;, Email:
Am J Health Behav. 2017 Jul 1;41(4):390-400. doi: 10.5993/AJHB.41.4.3.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether HIV/AIDS public service announcements (PSAs) that use emotional appeals have unintended effects of creating stigmatizing attitudes in their viewers.
We analyzed data for 240 respondents located in the United States who were recruited online. Respondents were randomly assigned to one of 3 conditions, where they viewed a PSA with hope appeals, fear appeals, or non-emotional appeals. Respondents then answered a series of questions about their attitudes about HIV/AIDS; testing behavior; engagement with HIV/AIDS-related people, organizations, and issues; and HIV/AIDS knowledge. We then performed MANOVA analyses and Pearson correlations.
There were no significant differences in stigmatizing attitudes and behavior across the 3 conditions. However, once the data were split by sex, men exposed to the hope condition had significantly higher stigmatizing attitudes towards people living with HIV/AIDS than men in the other 2 conditions.
This result was unexpected and suggests that further research needs to be conducted with a more robust sample size to account for any moderating influences that might explain why a hopeful message that communicates togetherness would have a negative attitudinal impact on male viewers.
本研究旨在确定使用情感诉求的艾滋病公共服务公告(PSA)是否会在其观众中产生污名化态度的意外影响。
我们分析了在美国通过网络招募的240名受访者的数据。受访者被随机分配到三种情况之一,在这些情况下,他们观看了带有希望诉求、恐惧诉求或非情感诉求的PSA。受访者随后回答了一系列关于他们对艾滋病的态度、检测行为、与艾滋病相关的人员、组织和问题的接触以及艾滋病知识的问题。然后我们进行了多变量方差分析(MANOVA)和皮尔逊相关性分析。
三种情况下的污名化态度和行为没有显著差异。然而,一旦按性别对数据进行拆分,处于希望条件下的男性对艾滋病感染者的污名化态度明显高于其他两种条件下的男性。
这一结果出乎意料,表明需要以更大的样本量进行进一步研究,以考虑任何可能解释为什么传达团结的希望信息会对男性观众产生负面态度影响的调节因素。