Aguirre-Camacho Aldo, Hylland Amalie Akerø, Moriconi Valeria, Bellido-Esteban Alberto, Tirado-Muñoz Judit
School of Biomedical Sciences, Universidad Europea de Madrid, Villaviciosa de Odón, Madrid, Spain.
School of Biomedical Sciences, Universidad Europea de Madrid, Calle Tajo, s/n. Urb. El Bosque, Villaviciosa de Odón, Madrid, 28670, Spain.
BMC Womens Health. 2025 May 7;25(1):215. doi: 10.1186/s12905-025-03751-x.
Young women are overrepresented in sensationalist media stories about breast cancer, which has been associated with heightened breast cancer concern within this population. Recent research has also revealed that young women show significant misconceptions about breast cancer, and that these seem to have been increasing over the last two decades. Accordingly, the present study sought to gather experimental evidence on the impact of media messages on negative affect, fear of breast cancer, fatalism, and misconceptions about breast cancer among young women.
186 females aged 18 to 40 were randomly allocated into one of three experimental conditions, designed to recreate the nature of breast cancer information typically presented in government health websites (i.e. objective information, condition 1) and women's magazines (i.e. sensationalist information); as part of the sensationalist information, participants were either exposed to a photograph of a young woman (i.e. condition 2) or a middle-aged woman (i.e. condition 3) featured as a cancer patient.
Participants exposed to sensationalist information (i.e. conditions 2 and 3) reported significantly higher levels of negative affect, fear of breast cancer, and fatalism than participants exposed to objective information, after statistically adjusting for relevant covariates. No statistically significant differences were observed between participants exposed to sensationalist information featuring women of different ages. Overall, participants held important misconceptions about breast cancer. First, they greatly overestimated the risk of receiving a breast cancer diagnosis, especially participants exposed to sensationalist information featuring a young woman. Second, they also believed that breast cancer was most often diagnosed among women just under 50 years of age; participants exposed to sensationalist information (i.e. conditions 2 and 3) estimated the age at diagnosis as significantly lower than those exposed to objective information.
This study provides experimental evidence that sensationalist media increases concern and contributes to misconceptions about breast cancer. Concern and misconceptions may by further exacerbated when sensationalist messages feature a young woman as a cancer patient, thus offering a distorted view of the women typically diagnosed with breast cancer. Overall, participants revealed important misconceptions about breast cancer, which has significant implications for preventive behaviors and health communication.
在有关乳腺癌的耸人听闻的媒体报道中,年轻女性的比例过高,这与该人群中对乳腺癌的关注度增加有关。最近的研究还表明,年轻女性对乳腺癌存在重大误解,而且在过去二十年中这些误解似乎在增加。因此,本研究旨在收集实验证据,以探究媒体信息对年轻女性的负面影响、对乳腺癌的恐惧、宿命论以及对乳腺癌的误解。
186名年龄在18至40岁之间的女性被随机分配到三种实验条件之一,这些条件旨在重现政府健康网站(即客观信息,条件1)和女性杂志(即耸人听闻的信息)中通常呈现的乳腺癌信息的性质;作为耸人听闻的信息的一部分,参与者要么接触到一张年轻女性(即条件2)或中年女性(即条件3)作为癌症患者的照片。
在对相关协变量进行统计调整后,接触耸人听闻的信息(即条件2和3)的参与者报告的负面影响、对乳腺癌的恐惧和宿命论水平显著高于接触客观信息的参与者。在接触以不同年龄女性为特色的耸人听闻的信息的参与者之间,未观察到统计学上的显著差异。总体而言,参与者对乳腺癌存在重大误解。首先,他们大大高估了被诊断为乳腺癌的风险,尤其是接触到以年轻女性为特色的耸人听闻的信息的参与者。其次,他们还认为乳腺癌最常发生在刚满50岁的女性中;接触耸人听闻的信息(即条件2和3)的参与者估计的诊断年龄明显低于接触客观信息的参与者。
本研究提供了实验证据,表明耸人听闻的媒体报道会增加对乳腺癌的关注并导致误解。当耸人听闻的信息以年轻女性作为癌症患者为特色时,这种关注和误解可能会进一步加剧,从而提供了对通常被诊断为乳腺癌的女性的扭曲看法。总体而言,参与者揭示了对乳腺癌的重大误解,这对预防行为和健康传播具有重要意义。