Effects of Prior Exposure to Conflicting Health Information on Responses to Subsequent Unrelated Health Messages: Results from a Population-Based Longitudinal Experiment.

Rebekah H Nagler, Rachel I Vogel, Sarah E Gollust, Marco C Yzer, Alexander J Rothman
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

Background: Accumulating evidence suggests that exposure to conflicting health information can adversely affect public understanding of and trust in health recommendations. What is not known is whether prior exposure to such information renders people less receptive to subsequent unrelated health messages about behaviors for which the evidence is clear and consistent.

Purpose: This study tests this "carryover" effects hypothesis, positing that prior exposure to conflict will reduce receptivity to subsequent unrelated health messages, and examines potential affective and cognitive pathways through which such effects might occur.

Methods: A three-wave, online, population-based survey experiment (N = 2,716) assessed whether participants who were randomly assigned to view a series of health news stories and social media posts featuring conflict at Times 1 and 2 were ultimately less receptive at Time 3 to ads from existing health campaigns about behaviors for which there is scientific consensus, compared to those who saw the same series of stories and posts that did not feature conflict.

Results: Structural equation modeling revealed evidence of carryover effects of exposure to conflict on two dimensions of message receptivity: greater resistance to the unrelated ads and lower perceptions of the health behaviors featured in the ads. Modeling indicated that carryover effects were a function of generalized backlash toward health recommendations and research elicited by prior exposure to conflicting information.

Conclusions: Findings suggest that the broader public information environment, which is increasingly characterized by messages of conflict and controversy, could undermine the success of large-scale public health messaging strategies.

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先前暴露于相互矛盾的健康信息对随后不相关健康信息反应的影响:一项基于人群的纵向实验结果
背景:越来越多的证据表明,接触相互矛盾的健康信息会对公众对健康建议的理解和信任产生不利影响。目前尚不清楚的是,事先接触这些信息是否会使人们更不容易接受随后与证据明确一致的行为有关的不相关的健康信息。目的:本研究检验了这种“传递”效应假说,假设先前接触冲突会降低对随后不相关的健康信息的接受度,并研究了这种影响可能发生的潜在情感和认知途径。方法:一项三波、在线、基于人群的调查实验(N = 2716)评估了被随机分配在第1次和第2次观看一系列以冲突为特征的健康新闻故事和社交媒体帖子的参与者,与那些观看相同系列的故事和帖子但没有冲突的人相比,是否最终在第3次更不容易接受现有健康活动中有关科学共识行为的广告。结果:结构方程模型揭示了冲突暴露在信息接受的两个维度上的传递效应的证据:对不相关广告的更大抵抗和对广告中特征的健康行为的更低感知。模型表明,传递效应是对先前接触冲突信息引起的健康建议和研究的普遍抵制的函数。结论:研究结果表明,日益以冲突和争议信息为特征的更广泛的公共信息环境可能会破坏大规模公共卫生信息战略的成功。
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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