Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Effects of a risk-based online mammography intervention on accuracy of perceived risk and mammography intentions

2016; Elsevier BV; Volume: 99; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.pec.2016.05.005

ISSN

1873-5134

Autores

Holli H. Seitz, Laura Gibson, Christine Skubisz, Heather Forquer, Susan Mello, Marilyn M. Schapira, Katrina Armstrong, Joseph N. Cappella,

Tópico(s)

Health Literacy and Information Accessibility

Resumo

This experiment tested the effects of an individualized risk-based online mammography decision intervention. The intervention employs exemplification theory and the Elaboration Likelihood Model of persuasion to improve the match between breast cancer risk and mammography intentions. 2918 women ages 35–49 were stratified into two levels of 10-year breast cancer risk (<1.5%; ≥1.5%) then randomly assigned to one of eight conditions: two comparison conditions and six risk-based intervention conditions that varied according to a 2 (amount of content: brief vs. extended) x 3 (format: expository vs. untailored exemplar [example case] vs. tailored exemplar) design. Outcomes included mammography intentions and accuracy of perceived breast cancer risk. Risk-based intervention conditions improved the match between objective risk estimates and perceived risk, especially for high-numeracy women with a 10-year breast cancer risk ≤1.5%. For women with a risk ≤1.5%, exemplars improved accuracy of perceived risk and all risk-based interventions increased intentions to wait until age 50 to screen. A risk-based mammography intervention improved accuracy of perceived risk and the match between objective risk estimates and mammography intentions. Interventions could be applied in online or clinical settings to help women understand risk and make mammography decisions.

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