Stacy A W, Bentler P M, Flay B R
Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California, Alhambra 91803-1358.
Health Psychol. 1994 Jan;13(1):73-85. doi: 10.1037//0278-6133.13.1.73.
Five different health behaviors (cigarette use, alcohol use, binge eating, illicit drug use, and drunk driving) were studied prospectively in 5 different groups of subjects. Associations between attitudes toward these behaviors and the behaviors themselves were investigated over at least 2 waves of measurement. Findings revealed that attitudes predicted behavior nonspuriously in 2 instances: alcohol use and marijuana use. Attitudes did not predict drunk driving, binge eating, or smoking behaviors. Past behavior predicted attitude in the domains of binge eating and smoking, but not in the domains of alcohol use, drunk driving, or marijuana use. The results are discussed in terms of several alternative approaches that have implications for interventions that attempt to influence health behavior through attitude change.
对五组不同的受试者进行了前瞻性研究,涉及五种不同的健康行为(吸烟、饮酒、暴饮暴食、非法药物使用和酒驾)。在至少两轮测量中,研究了对这些行为的态度与行为本身之间的关联。研究结果显示,在两种情况下态度能够可靠地预测行为:饮酒和使用大麻。态度并不能预测酒驾、暴饮暴食或吸烟行为。过去的行为能够预测暴饮暴食和吸烟领域的态度,但不能预测饮酒、酒驾或使用大麻领域的态度。将根据几种替代方法对结果进行讨论,这些方法对试图通过态度改变来影响健康行为的干预措施具有启示意义。