Simonds Vanessa W, Omidpanah Adam, Buchwald Dedra
Department of Health and Human Development, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA.
College of Nursing, Initiative for Research and Education to Advance Community Health (IREACH), Washington State University, Spokane, WA, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2017 Oct 2;17(1):763. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4766-x.
According to the Risk Perception Attitude (RPA) framework, classifying people according to their perceptions of disease risk and their self-efficacy beliefs allows us to predict their likelihood for engaging in preventive behaviors. Health interventions can then be targeted according to RPA group. We applied the framework to type 2 diabetes prevention behaviors among American Indians and expanded it to include culture and numeracy.
Using a cross-sectional study design, we surveyed a sample of Northern Plains American Indians in a reservation community setting on self-reported perceptions of diabetes risk, objective diabetes risk, self-efficacy, engagement in healthy behaviors, knowledge of diabetes risk factors, and covariates including demographics, numeracy, and cultural identity. We used the RPA framework to classify participants into four groups based on their perceptions of risk and self-efficacy. Analyses of variance and covariance estimated inter-group differences in behaviors associated with type 2 diabetes prevention.
Among 128 participants, our only finding consistent with the RPA framework was that self-efficacy and risk perception predicted knowledge about diabetes risk factors. We found limited evidence for the influence of cultural identity within the RPA framework. Overall, participants had lower numeracy skills which tended to be associated with inaccurate perceptions of higher levels of risk.
The theoretical framework may benefit from inclusion of further contextual factors that influence these behaviors. Attention to numeracy skills stands out in our study as an important influence on the RPA framework, highlighting the importance of attending to numeracy when targeting and tailoring risk information to participants segmented by the RPA framework.
根据风险感知态度(RPA)框架,依据人们对疾病风险的认知及其自我效能信念对其进行分类,能够帮助我们预测他们采取预防行为的可能性。随后可根据RPA分组对健康干预措施进行针对性调整。我们将该框架应用于美国印第安人的2型糖尿病预防行为研究,并对其进行扩展,纳入了文化和数字能力因素。
采用横断面研究设计,我们在一个保留地社区环境中对北平原美国印第安人样本进行了调查,内容包括自我报告的糖尿病风险认知、客观糖尿病风险、自我效能、健康行为参与情况、糖尿病风险因素知识,以及包括人口统计学、数字能力和文化认同在内的协变量。我们使用RPA框架,根据参与者对风险和自我效能的认知将他们分为四组。方差分析和协方差分析估计了与2型糖尿病预防相关行为的组间差异。
在128名参与者中,我们唯一与RPA框架一致的发现是自我效能和风险认知能够预测对糖尿病风险因素的了解。我们发现RPA框架内文化认同的影响证据有限。总体而言,参与者的数字能力较低,这往往与对较高风险水平的不准确认知相关。
该理论框架可能需要纳入更多影响这些行为的背景因素才能更具优势。在我们的研究中,数字能力作为对RPA框架的一个重要影响因素尤为突出,这凸显了在根据RPA框架对参与者进行分类并为其量身定制风险信息时,关注数字能力的重要性。