Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical University of Lodz, Łódź, Poland.
OSOM STUDIO, Łódź, Poland.
PLoS One. 2019 Jun 24;14(6):e0218398. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218398. eCollection 2019.
Despite offering little overall benefit and emerging concerns about their safety, dietary supplements have become increasingly popular. Trust in advertising them may contribute to high confidence in dietary supplements in public opinion.
To develop and validate a screening questionnaire intended for the general public regarding knowledge about dietary supplements and a questionnaire on trust in advertising dietary supplements, and to identify the association between these constructs.
The development and validation of the measures was overseen by the panels of experts. The conceptual frameworks of the constructs were scientifically well grounded. A set of semi-structured interviews and anonymous web-based surveys was performed. The final questionnaire was applied to 220 non-medically educated people and 121 medically educated people.
A 17-item questionnaire on knowledge about dietary supplements and eight-item questionnaire on trust in advertising dietary supplements were developed. The measures presented satisfactory proof of validity, however, the psychometric properties of the questionnaire on knowledge were modest. Both the knowledge about dietary supplements in the study group and trust in advertising them were low. A significant negative relationship was found between knowledge about dietary supplements and trust in advertising them among the general public (Pearson's r = -0.42, 95%CI: -0.52 to -0.30, p<0.0001). This association was especially pronounced in people who reported not taking dietary supplements (Pearson's r = -0.61, 95%CI: -0.76 to -0.39, p<0.0001).
The extensive advertising of dietary supplements appears to be in conflict with promoting evidence-based knowledge about them, which raises substantial concerns for the public health. The results of the study are only preliminary and require further confirmation and exploration.
尽管膳食补充剂的整体益处有限,且其安全性也引发了新的担忧,但它们的受欢迎程度却与日俱增。公众对其广告的信任可能是导致人们对膳食补充剂高度信任的原因之一。
旨在开发和验证一个针对公众的关于膳食补充剂知识的筛选问卷和一个关于对膳食补充剂广告信任的问卷,并确定这些结构之间的关联。
专家小组负责这些措施的制定和验证。这些结构的概念框架具有科学依据。进行了一系列半结构化访谈和匿名在线调查。最终的问卷应用于 220 名非医学教育背景的人和 121 名医学教育背景的人。
开发了一个包含 17 个问题的关于膳食补充剂知识的问卷和一个包含 8 个问题的关于对膳食补充剂广告信任的问卷。这些措施具有令人满意的有效性证明,但是关于膳食补充剂知识的问卷的心理测量性质并不理想。研究组的膳食补充剂知识和对其广告的信任都很低。在普通人群中,膳食补充剂知识与对其广告的信任之间存在显著的负相关关系(Pearson r = -0.42,95%CI:-0.52 至 -0.30,p<0.0001)。在报告不服用膳食补充剂的人群中,这种相关性更为明显(Pearson r = -0.61,95%CI:-0.76 至 -0.39,p<0.0001)。
广泛的膳食补充剂广告似乎与推广基于证据的相关知识相冲突,这对公众健康构成了重大威胁。研究结果只是初步的,需要进一步的确认和探索。