Wang Zijun Chloe, Ma Minqin, Xia Xi, Li Ming Milano, Zhao Xinshu, Ao Song Harris
Department of Communication, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Macau, Taipa, Macao.
Department of Communication, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Beijing Normal-Hong Kong Baptist University, Zhuhai, China.
Digit Health. 2025 Sep 11;11:20552076251376287. doi: 10.1177/20552076251376287. eCollection 2025 Jan-Dec.
Excessive alcohol consumption is a significant health concern in the United States. Alcohol restriction policies can help control the harms caused by alcohol use. eHealth activities have been proposed to bolster public support for such policies. However, the psychological mechanisms underlying this relationship remain unexplored. This study aims to investigate the association between eHealth activities and support for alcohol restriction policies by influencing the specific awareness of certain diseases (cancer and heart disease), and how this relationship can be moderated by self-efficacy, among three groups of drinkers (i.e., light, moderate, and heavy drinkers).
This study employed a secondary analysis of the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) in 2020, with a sample size of 1388. A moderated mediation analysis was conducted to examine the relationships among focal variables.
This study reported a positive indirect relationship between eHealth activities and support for alcohol restriction policies mediated by drinkers' perception that alcohol consumption causes cancer. Moreover, a positive moderating effect of self-efficacy was found in the relationship between eHealth activities and belief that alcohol causes cancer. However, for beliefs about alcohol causes heart disease, neither the indirect effect nor the moderating effect of self-efficacy was significant. In subgroup analysis, the indirect pathway from eHealth activities to support for alcohol restriction policies, via increased belief that alcohol causes cancer, was significant among light and moderate drinkers. Self-efficacy moderated the link between eHealth activities and beliefs about alcohol-related cancer and heart disease in moderate drinkers.
This study indicates the role of eHealth activities to promote alcohol restriction policies by raising drinkers' belief that alcohol causes cancer. Moreover, self-efficacy is crucial since it can strengthen the impact of eHealth activities on the belief that alcohol causes cancer. Finally, it is essential to correct the misconception about alcohol's benefits for heart disease.
在美国,过量饮酒是一个重大的健康问题。酒精限制政策有助于控制饮酒造成的危害。电子健康活动已被提议用于增强公众对这类政策的支持。然而,这种关系背后的心理机制仍未得到探索。本研究旨在调查电子健康活动与对酒精限制政策的支持之间的关联,具体通过影响对某些疾病(癌症和心脏病)的特定认知,以及自我效能如何在三组饮酒者(即轻度、中度和重度饮酒者)中调节这种关系。
本研究对2020年健康信息国家趋势调查(HINTS)进行了二次分析,样本量为1388。进行了调节中介分析以检验焦点变量之间的关系。
本研究报告了电子健康活动与对酒精限制政策的支持之间存在积极的间接关系,这种关系由饮酒者认为饮酒会导致癌症的认知所介导。此外,在电子健康活动与认为酒精会导致癌症的信念之间发现了自我效能的积极调节作用。然而,对于关于酒精导致心脏病的信念,自我效能的间接效应和调节效应均不显著。在亚组分析中,通过增强认为酒精会导致癌症的信念,从电子健康活动到支持酒精限制政策的间接路径在轻度和中度饮酒者中显著。自我效能调节了中度饮酒者中电子健康活动与关于酒精相关癌症和心脏病信念之间的联系。
本研究表明电子健康活动通过提高饮酒者认为酒精会导致癌症的信念来促进酒精限制政策的作用。此外,自我效能至关重要,因为它可以加强电子健康活动对认为酒精会导致癌症信念的影响。最后,纠正关于酒精对心脏病有益的误解至关重要。