Teye-Kwadjo Enoch
Department of Psychology, University of Ghana, Legon, P. O. Box LG84, Accra, Ghana.
Department of Industrial Psychology, Stellenbosch University, Private Bag X1, Matieland, 7602 South Africa.
Discov Psychol. 2022;2(1):30. doi: 10.1007/s44202-022-00042-6. Epub 2022 Jun 13.
This Perspective discusses the use of fear appeals in promoting health behaviour. The discussion establishes that fear appeal-based public health messages (i.e. public health messages that emphasise the consequences of failing to engage in a particular health behaviour) have two components (1) perceived threat and (2) perceived efficacy. A perceived threat has two subcomponents (a) perceived high susceptibility (e.g. 'I can contract COVID-19') and (b) perceived high severity (e.g. 'COVID-19 can kill me'). In a parallel fashion, perceived efficacy has two subcomponents (a) high response efficacy (e.g. 'Staying at home can reduce my risk for COVID-19') and (b) high self-efficacy (e.g. 'I can stay at home'). This discussion demonstrates that for fear appeals to have a desirable effect on health behaviour change, all of the four conditions (i.e. high perceived susceptibility, high perceived severity, high response efficacy, and high self-efficacy) are important and need to be fulfilled. However, empirical evidence shows that the four conditions are almost never fulfilled, calling into question the effectiveness of using fear appeals in promoting health behaviour change. In contrast, gain-framed public health messages (i.e. public health messages that highlight the benefits of engaging in a particular health behaviour), which do not require the fulfillment of these four conditions, have been shown to have positive effects on behaviour change outcomes. We argue that public health messages that highlight the benefits of engaging in COVID-19 preventive behaviour can have persuasive, desirable effects on health behaviour change, compared to public health messages that highlight the consequences of failing to engage in a particular COVID-19 preventive behaviour.
这篇观点论述文章探讨了恐惧诉求在促进健康行为方面的应用。该论述表明,基于恐惧诉求的公共卫生信息(即强调不采取特定健康行为所产生后果的公共卫生信息)有两个组成部分:(1)感知到的威胁和(2)感知到的效能。感知到的威胁有两个子组成部分:(a)感知到的高易感性(例如,“我可能感染新冠病毒”)和(b)感知到的高严重性(例如,“新冠病毒可能会要了我的命”)。同样,感知到的效能也有两个子组成部分:(a)高反应效能(例如,“待在家里可以降低我感染新冠病毒的风险”)和(b)高自我效能(例如,“我可以待在家里”)。该论述表明,为使恐惧诉求对健康行为改变产生理想效果,所有这四个条件(即高感知易感性、高感知严重性、高反应效能和高自我效能)都很重要且需要得到满足。然而,实证证据表明这四个条件几乎从未得到满足,这让人质疑使用恐惧诉求来促进健康行为改变的有效性。相比之下,强调采取特定健康行为的益处的获益框架公共卫生信息(即突出采取特定健康行为的好处的公共卫生信息),已被证明对行为改变结果有积极影响,且不需要满足这四个条件。我们认为,与强调不采取特定新冠病毒预防行为的后果的公共卫生信息相比,突出采取新冠病毒预防行为的益处的公共卫生信息对健康行为改变能产生有说服力的、理想的效果。