TY - JOUR
T1 - Cancer information scanning and seeking in the general population
AU - Kelly, Bridget
AU - Hornik, Robert
AU - Romantan, Anca
AU - Schwartz, J. Sanford
AU - Armstrong, Katrina
AU - Demichele, Angela
AU - Fishbein, Martin
AU - Gray, Stacy
AU - Hull, Shawnika
AU - Kim, Annice
AU - Nagler, Rebekah
AU - Niederdeppe, Jeff
AU - Ramirez, A. Susana
AU - Smith-Mclallen, Aaron
AU - Wong, Norman
N1 - Funding Information: The authors acknowledge the funding support of the National Cancer Institute’s Center of Excellence in Cancer Communication (CECCR) located at the Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania (P50-CA095856-05).
PY - 2010/10
Y1 - 2010/10
N2 - The amount of cancer-related information available in the media and other sources continues to increase each year. We wondered how people make use of such content in making specific health decisions. We studied both the information they actively seek (seeking) and that which they encounter in a less purposive way (scanning) through a nationally representative survey of adults aged 40-70 years (n=2,489) focused on information use around three prevention behaviors (dieting, fruit and vegetable consumption, and exercising) and three screening test behaviors (prostate-specific antigen, colonoscopy, mammogram). Overall, respondents reported a great deal of scanning and somewhat less seeking (on average 62% versus 28% for each behavior), and they used a range of sources including mass media, interpersonal conversations, and the Internet, alongside physicians. Seeking was predicted by female gender, age of 55-64 vs. 40-44, higher education, Black race and Hispanic ethnicity, and being married. Scanning was predicted by older age, female gender, and education. Respondents were fairly consistent in their place on a typology of scanning and seeking across behaviors. Seeking was associated with all six behaviors, and scanning was associated with three of six behaviors.
AB - The amount of cancer-related information available in the media and other sources continues to increase each year. We wondered how people make use of such content in making specific health decisions. We studied both the information they actively seek (seeking) and that which they encounter in a less purposive way (scanning) through a nationally representative survey of adults aged 40-70 years (n=2,489) focused on information use around three prevention behaviors (dieting, fruit and vegetable consumption, and exercising) and three screening test behaviors (prostate-specific antigen, colonoscopy, mammogram). Overall, respondents reported a great deal of scanning and somewhat less seeking (on average 62% versus 28% for each behavior), and they used a range of sources including mass media, interpersonal conversations, and the Internet, alongside physicians. Seeking was predicted by female gender, age of 55-64 vs. 40-44, higher education, Black race and Hispanic ethnicity, and being married. Scanning was predicted by older age, female gender, and education. Respondents were fairly consistent in their place on a typology of scanning and seeking across behaviors. Seeking was associated with all six behaviors, and scanning was associated with three of six behaviors.
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U2 - 10.1080/10810730.2010.514029
DO - 10.1080/10810730.2010.514029
M3 - Article
C2 - 21104503
SN - 1081-0730
VL - 15
SP - 734
EP - 753
JO - Journal of Health Communication
JF - Journal of Health Communication
IS - 7
ER -