政治观点、健康素养与 COVID-19 信念和行为:一个有调节的中介模型。

Political views, health literacy, and COVID-19 beliefs and behaviors: A moderated mediation model.

机构信息

Department of Psychological Sciences, University of California, Merced, USA.

School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Australia.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2023 Mar;320:115672. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115672. Epub 2023 Jan 30.

Abstract

RATIONALE

Mitigating the spread of COVID-19 requires that people understand the need for and engage in protective behaviors. Given the complexity and rapid progression of media information about the pandemic, health literacy could be essential to acquiring the accurate beliefs, concern for societal risks, and appreciation of restrictive policies needed to motivate these behaviors. Yet with the increasingly politicized nature of COVID-related issues in the United States, health literacy could be an asset for those with more liberal views but less so for those with more conservative views.

OBJECTIVE

This study tested a hypothesized model proposing that political views moderate the associations of health literacy with COVID-19 protective behaviors as well as the mediational roles of accurate and inaccurate COVID-19 beliefs, concern for society, and governmental control attitudes.

METHODS

We surveyed residents in three diverse regions of California in June 2020 (N = 669) and February 2021 (N = 611). Participants completed measures of health literacy, political views, and COVID-19 beliefs and behaviors.

RESULTS

Moderated mediational analyses largely supported the proposed model with both samples. Health literacy was associated with more accurate COVID-19 beliefs, less inaccurate COVID-19 beliefs, greater concern for societal risks, more positive attitudes regarding restrictive government control, more protective behavior, less risky behavior, and stronger vaccine intentions; beliefs, concern for society, and governmental control attitudes mediated the health literacy-behavior relationships. As predicted, however, these associations of health literacy with adaptive beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors varied according to political views. The direct and mediated relationships were held for participants with more liberal views and, to a lesser extent, for those with moderate views, but they were weaker or absent for participants with more conservative views.

CONCLUSIONS

These findings contribute new evidence of processes linking health literacy with adaptive beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors and how social and political contexts can shape those processes.

摘要

背景

减轻 COVID-19 的传播需要人们了解并采取保护行为。鉴于有关大流行的媒体信息的复杂性和快速发展,健康素养对于获得准确的信念、对社会风险的关注以及对激励这些行为所需的限制性政策的欣赏可能至关重要。然而,在美国,与 COVID 相关的问题日益政治化,对于那些观点更为自由的人来说,健康素养可能是一种优势,但对于那些观点更为保守的人来说则不然。

目的

本研究检验了一个假设模型,该模型提出政治观点调节了健康素养与 COVID-19 保护行为的关联,以及准确和不准确的 COVID-19 信念、对社会的关注和政府控制态度的中介作用。

方法

我们在 2020 年 6 月(N=669)和 2021 年 2 月(N=611)在加利福尼亚州的三个不同地区调查了居民。参与者完成了健康素养、政治观点和 COVID-19 信念和行为的测量。

结果

在两个样本中,调节中介分析在很大程度上支持了所提出的模型。健康素养与更准确的 COVID-19 信念、较少不准确的 COVID-19 信念、更大的对社会风险的关注、对限制政府控制的更积极态度、更多的保护行为、更少的风险行为以及更强的疫苗接种意愿相关;信念、对社会的关注和政府控制态度介导了健康素养与行为的关系。然而,正如预测的那样,健康素养与适应性信念、态度和行为的这些关联因政治观点而异。对于观点更为自由的参与者,以及在较小程度上对于观点更为温和的参与者,这些关联和中介关系成立,但对于观点更为保守的参与者,这些关联较弱或不存在。

结论

这些发现为健康素养与适应性信念、态度和行为的关联以及社会和政治背景如何塑造这些关联的过程提供了新的证据。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5922/9884608/ac015ccf8daf/gr1_lrg.jpg

相似文献

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索