Understanding Fear of Zika: Personal, Interpersonal, and Media Influences.

Chun Yang, James Price Dillard, Ruobing Li
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引用次数: 46

Abstract

Fear of infectious disease often motivates people to protect themselves. But, it can also produce negative bio-social-psychological effects whose severity is on par with those of the disease. The WHO declaration of Zika as a world health crisis presented an opportunity to study factors that bring about fear. Beginning nine days after the WHO announcement, data were gathered from women aged 18-35 living in the southern United States (N = 719). Respondents reported experiencing fear of Zika at levels akin to those reported following other significant crises/disasters (e.g., the terrorist attacks of 9/11). Fear increased as a function of (1) personal, but not other-relevance, (2) frequency of media exposure, but not media content, and (3) frequency of interpersonal exposure and interpersonal content. It is argued that media and interpersonal message sources may be innately predisposed to amplify, rather than attenuate, risk.

理解对寨卡病毒的恐惧:个人、人际和媒体的影响。
对传染病的恐惧常常促使人们保护自己。但是,它也会产生负面的生物社会心理影响,其严重程度与疾病相当。世卫组织宣布寨卡病毒为世界卫生危机,这为研究导致恐惧的因素提供了机会。从世卫组织宣布9天后开始,从生活在美国南部的18-35岁妇女(N = 719)收集数据。受访者表示,对寨卡病毒的恐惧程度与其他重大危机/灾难(如9/11恐怖袭击)后的恐惧程度相似。恐惧增加是以下因素的函数:(1)个人相关性,而不是其他相关性;(2)媒体曝光频率,而不是媒体内容;(3)人际曝光频率和人际内容。有人认为,媒体和人际信息来源可能天生倾向于放大而不是减弱风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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