Rapheal Erica, Prithviraj Ranjini, Campbell Stephanie, Stoddard Steven T, Paz-Soldan Valerie A
Independent Consultant, Saint Paul, Minnesota.
Emergent BioSolutions Inc., Gaithersburg, Maryland.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2023 Sep 5;109(4):937-944. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.22-0633. Print 2023 Oct 4.
International travelers are at increased risk of infectious disease, but almost half of Americans traveling to lower- and middle-income countries seek no health information before traveling. The Health Belief Model (HBM) can help evaluate decisions by categorizing behaviors into five categories: susceptibility, severity, benefits, barriers, and self-efficacy. This study sought to use the HBM to elucidate what may influence an individual to make certain pre-travel health decisions. We surveyed 604 participants who had recently traveled to an at-risk country. Participants were subset into nested groups: full population, sought any health information, and visited a clinic or health care provider (HCP). Survey questions were categorized according to the HBM, assembled into a priori models, and analyzed in each group using logistic regression with three main outcome variables: "Sought any pre-travel health information," "Visited clinic or HCP," and "Received vaccine." Of the 604 participants, 333 (55%) sought any health information, 245 (41% of total) reported visiting an HCP, and 166 (27% of total) reported receiving a vaccine before traveling. Models containing variables from the susceptibility and benefits categories were most successful in predicting all three outcomes; susceptibility was a more relevant consideration in information seeking and seeing a provider than vaccination, whereas benefits was relevant for all outcomes. Our results emphasize the importance of an individual's perceived susceptibility to disease and perceived benefit of interventions in predicting pre-travel health behaviors. Understanding this interaction can help shape how HCPs and public health entities can encourage health care seeking and vaccine uptake in travelers.
国际旅行者感染传染病的风险更高,但前往中低收入国家旅行的美国人中,几乎有一半在旅行前未寻求任何健康信息。健康信念模型(HBM)可通过将行为分为易感性、严重性、益处、障碍和自我效能五个类别来帮助评估决策。本研究旨在运用健康信念模型来阐明可能影响个人做出某些旅行前健康决策的因素。我们对604名近期前往风险国家旅行的参与者进行了调查。参与者被分为嵌套组:全体人群、寻求过任何健康信息的人群以及就诊于诊所或医疗服务提供者(HCP)的人群。调查问题根据健康信念模型进行分类,整理成先验模型,并在每组中使用逻辑回归分析三个主要结果变量:“寻求过任何旅行前健康信息”、“就诊于诊所或医疗服务提供者”以及“接种过疫苗”。在604名参与者中,333人(55%)寻求过任何健康信息,245人(占总人数的41%)报告就诊于医疗服务提供者,166人(占总人数的27%)报告在旅行前接种过疫苗。包含易感性和益处类别变量的模型在预测所有三个结果方面最为成功;在寻求信息和就诊方面,易感性比接种疫苗更具相关性,而益处与所有结果均相关。我们的结果强调了个人对疾病的感知易感性以及对干预措施的感知益处在预测旅行前健康行为方面的重要性。理解这种相互作用有助于塑造医疗服务提供者和公共卫生实体如何鼓励旅行者寻求医疗服务和接种疫苗。