| Literature DB >> 19214752 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in 2003 and the subsequent emergence of the H5N1 virus have highlighted the threat of a global pandemic influenza outbreak. Planning effective public health control measures for such a case will be highly dependent on sound theory-based research on how people perceive the risks involved in such an event.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19214752 PMCID: PMC7090865 DOI: 10.1007/s12529-008-9002-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Med ISSN: 1070-5503
Overview of characteristics of the reviewed studies
| Authors | Disease | Country | Sample | Study design | Research question/study purpose | Theoretical model | Core concept of risk | Risk-related cognitions and emotions | Study of risk perception- behavior-relationship |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abbate et al. [ | Avian influenza | Italy | Poultry workers, aged 19–75, from 110 poultry farms in the Campania region, Italy; | Cross-sectional interview survey in the work place, December 2005–March 2006 | Evaluation of knowledge, attitudes, and infection control practices | None |
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| Yes |
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| Modification of work habits; Protection measures, e.g. wearing gloves, face masks, eye protection, hand washing | |||||||
| Perceived risk for contracting avian influenza for: poultry workers, butchers, veterinarians, hunters | Perceived severity: A1 is a serious disease | ||||||||
| Dichotomous scale: yes–no | Three-point scale: “agree,” “uncertain,” and “disagree” | ||||||||
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| Fear of getting avian influenza | Fear of family–coworkers getting avian influenza | ||||||||
| Ten-point scale: “no fear at all” to “very much fear” | |||||||||
| Barennes et al. [ | Avian influenza | Laos | Three random samples | Cross-sectional interview survey, April–March 2006 | To learn more about Laotian’s knowledge of HPA1 and perceptions of their risk | None |
| Yes | |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., mask wearing, hand washing | ||||||||
| (1) Market vendors and visitors in an urban setting, mean age = 41; | |||||||||
| Perceived risk for avian influenza at home | |||||||||
| Perceived risk for avian influenza in Laos | |||||||||
| (2) People living in a semiurban setting, mean age = 34; | Dichotomous scales: yes–no | ||||||||
| (3) People living in a rural setting, mean age = 38; | |||||||||
| Brug et al. [ | SARS | Netherlands | Participants in an internet research panel, aged 19–78; | Cross-sectional internet survey, during outbreak 2003 in an area with no cases | To explore SARS-related perceptions, knowledge, actions, and use of information sources | Precaution Adoption Model |
| Yes | |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., wearing of face masks, hand washing | ||||||||
| Perceived likelihood of acquiring SARS | |||||||||
| Perceived likelihood of acquiring SARS compared to other persons | |||||||||
| Perceived likelihood of other diseases (e.g., cancer/accidents) | |||||||||
| Perceived likelihood of dying from SARS | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “negligible” to “very large” | |||||||||
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| Worry about oneself contracting SARS | |||||||||
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| Worry about a family member contracting SARS | |||||||||
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| Worry about SARS occurring in the region | |||||||||
| Worry about SARS emerging as a health issue | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “negligible” to “very large” | |||||||||
| Cava et al. [ | SARS | Canada | Men and women who had been quarantined during the outbreak; one third = health care workers; | Qualitative study with a semistructured interview guide database, October 2003–March 2004 | To explore the experience of being quarantined, particularly the relationship between perceived risk and compliance with the quarantine order | Health Belief Model and Protection Motivation Theory | No standardized questions; narratives |
| Yes |
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| Fear and denial with regard to SARS | Compliance with quarantine measures | |||||||
| Beliefs about level of risk of contracting SARS | |||||||||
| Beliefs about level of risk of spreading SARS | |||||||||
| Chang et al. [ | SARS | Taiwan | Nurses from one hospital, aged 29–41; | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey, July–August 2003 | To test the hypothesis that susceptibility perceptions moderate the relationship between organizational commitment and intention to leave the profession | None for the risk concept |
| Yes | |
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| Behavioral intention, i.e., intention to quit risky job | ||||||||
| Infection probability due to job: by taking care of a SARS patient, I might become infected | |||||||||
| Five-point scale: “strongly agree” to “strongly disagree” | |||||||||
| Chong et al. [ | SARS | Taiwan | Health care workers from a large tertiary hospital in Southern Taiwan, aged 21–59; | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey, part paper–pencil, part internet-based, early May (initial phase)–June 2003 (repair phase) | To assess the immediate stress and psychological impact of SARS on health workers in a tertiary hospital which was seriously affected by an outbreak and compare data over a period of 6 weeks | None |
| No | |
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| Perceived risk through job: my job puts me at great risk for exposure to SARS | |||||||||
| Perceived fatality: little chance of survival if infected | |||||||||
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| Fear of falling ill with SARS | |||||||||
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| Fear of passing SARS to others | |||||||||
| Family/friends worried that they might be infected by me | |||||||||
| People avoid family because of work | |||||||||
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| Accept the risk as part of job | |||||||||
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| Personal control over infection | |||||||||
| Intention to change job | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “strongly agree” to “strongly disagree” | |||||||||
| de Zwart et al. [ | Avian influenza | Multicountry comparison study: five European countries and three Asian countries/cities: Denmark, Netherlands, UK, Spain, China, Hong Kong, Singapore | Eight random samples; adult population in the respective countries, aged 18–75; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, September–November 2005 | Investigation of risk perception and efficacy beliefs related to avian influenza | Protection Motivation Theory |
| No | |
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| Vulnerability to SARS: perceived likelihood of becoming infected | |||||||||
| Perceived severity of SARS: risk of dying from SARS | |||||||||
| Risk: multiplication of vulnerability and severity as specified by protection motivation theory | |||||||||
| Five-point scale: “low” to “high” | |||||||||
| Fielding et al. [ | Avian influenza | Hong Kong | Random sample; general population households, aged 16–95; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, during the peak of outbreak 2004 | To determine population knowledge of risk and self-protection practices and estimate population exposure from live chicken sales | None |
| Yes | |
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| Protective/risk behavior, e.g., buying live chickens, handling chickens | ||||||||
| Perceived likelihood of getting sick from buying live chickens | |||||||||
| Five-point scale: “never–very” to “unlikely” and 0–100% probability estimate | |||||||||
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| Buying live chickens is risky to health | |||||||||
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| Friends expressing worry about catching avian influenza | |||||||||
| Five- to seven-point scales | |||||||||
| Hong and Collins [ | SARS and influenza | Korea | Adults from the general public, aged 20 to 75, who were approached at random in the city center and shopping malls; | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey, October 2003 | To examine how connections between risk perceptions of influenza and SARS affect behavioral intentions for vaccination | State-dependent expected utility framework |
| Yes | |
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| Behavioral intention for influenza vaccination | ||||||||
| Perceived riskiness of SARS | |||||||||
| Perceived riskiness of “normal” influenza | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “not at all risky” to “extremely risky” | |||||||||
| Imai et al. [ | SARS | Japan | Health care workers from seven hospitals throughout Japan, mean age 35.6 (SD = 11.2); | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey, immediately after SARS epidemic in other Asian countries in 2003 | To examine the level of SARS risk perception and anxiety in Japan, the knowledge of preventive measures and perception of infection control measures and relations among these factors | None |
| No | |
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| Fear of falling ill with SARS | |||||||||
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| Risk accepted as part of job | |||||||||
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| Personal control over infection | |||||||||
| Intention to change job | |||||||||
| Avoidance of patients | |||||||||
| Seven-point scales: “strongly disagree” to “strongly agree,” + “do not know” | |||||||||
| Ji et al. [ | SARS | (1) Toronto, Canada | University students, | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey, May–June 2003 | To test if Chinese students are more unrealistically optimistic than European-Canadian students | Theory of Optimistic Bias/Unrealistic Optimism |
| No | |
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| (2) Beijing, China | Perceived probability of contracting SARS | ||||||||
| Probability of own chance to become infected as compared to an average person of same gender and age | |||||||||
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| Perceived probability that an average person of same age and gender might get infected | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “much less likely than average” to “much more likely than average” | |||||||||
| Koh et al. [ | SARS | Singapore | All employees of nine major health care institutions; | Cross-sectional mailed questionnaire survey, during outbreak, March–June 2003 | Learning about the fears, anxieties, and reactions of health care workers during the SARS epidemic | None |
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| No |
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| Close others worried they might be infected by me | ||||||||
| Perceived risk through job: job puts me at great risk of exposure to SARS | |||||||||
| Fear of spreading the disease | |||||||||
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| Social avoidance because of job | ||||||||
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| Six-point scales: “strongly disagree” to “strongly agree” | ||||||||
| Fear of falling ill with SARS | |||||||||
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| Risk accepted as part of job | |||||||||
| Six-point scales: “strongly disagree” to “strongly agree” | |||||||||
| Koh et al. [ | SARS | (1) Singapore | Health care workers from (1) nine primary hospitals and nine major institutional health care settings in Singapore; | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey, May–September 2003 | Study of perceptions of risk for SARS infection and preventive measures among health care workers in Singapore, who handled cases of SARS and in Japan, a SARS-free country | None |
| No | |
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| Perceived risk through job: job puts me at great risk for exposure to SARS | |||||||||
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| Fear of falling ill with SARS | |||||||||
| (2) Japan | (2) Seven tertiary-level hospitals throughout Japan; | Six-point scales: “strongly disagree” to “strongly agree” | |||||||
| Kristiansen et al. [ | Avian influenza | Norway | (1) Norwegians aged 15–67; | Cross-sectional internet-based questionnaire survey | What are people’s perceptions of the mortality risk during an influenza pandemic? | None |
| No | |
| (2) Norwegians aged 68+, all randomly chosen from an internet-based panel of 25,000 Norwegians aged 15years +; |
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| Perceived probability of death from AI: estimated number of fatalities in Norway in case of an outbreak | |||||||||
| Lau et al. [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Random sample; Chinese-speaking residents, aged 18–60; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, December 2003–January 2004 | To investigate the general population’s perceptions on susceptibility of contracting SARS via daily contacts with asymptomatic and recovered SARS patients and the diseases’ consequences for the health of recovered patients | Health Belief Model |
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| Yes |
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| Avoidance of recovered patients | |||||||
| Perceived susceptibility to SARS | Worry about contracting SARS when interacting with recovered patient | ||||||||
| Infectivity of recovered SARS patients, e.g., dining with recovered SARS patient could transmit SARS | Disturbance about SARS | ||||||||
| Perceived consequences/severity: mortality rate for SARS patients; | |||||||||
| Consequences of SARS for health state | |||||||||
| Consequences of SARS for ability to perform job duties | |||||||||
| Dichotomous scales: percent agreement | |||||||||
| Lau et al. [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Travelers from mainland China to Hong Kong, aged 18–60; | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey conducted in the exit hall of a custom office of a main border checkpoint, April 2003 | To investigate the prevalence of preventive behaviors practiced by cross-border travelers as well as factors associated with these | Health Belief Model |
| Yes | |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., hand washing, mask wearing | ||||||||
| Perceived risk of contracting SARS | |||||||||
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| Perceived risk of Hong Kong residents to contract SARS in different provinces in mainland China | |||||||||
| Perceived fatality of SARS | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “very low” to “very high” | |||||||||
| Lau et al. [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Chinese-speaking residents, aged 15–60, traveling back to Hong Kong by air; | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey conducted at airport express bus station and express train platform at Chap Lap Kok International Airport, April 2003 | To investigate factors associated with SARS-preventive behaviors | Health Belief model |
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| Yes |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., mask wearing, avoidance of public places | |||||||
| Susceptibility to SARS: perceived chance of infection on board | Perceived severity of SARS: | ||||||||
| Perceived chance of infection at destination point | Perceived chance of mortality of SARS | ||||||||
| Five-point scales: “very low” to “very high” | Five-point scales: “very low” to “very high” | ||||||||
| Lau et al. [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Ten random samples; Chinese-speaking Hong Kong residents, aged 18–60; | Ten telephone interview surveys with subsequent cohorts,1–5 before April 2003 (escalating phase), 6–10 April 1 and after (improving phase) | Investigation of the evolution and changes in attitudes, knowledge, and behaviors of Hong Kong residents in response to the public health crisis during the two phases of the epidemic | None |
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| No |
| (1) |
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| (2) | Susceptibility to infection with SARS: perceived chance of infection for oneself | Perceived severity of SARS (Is SARS fatal?) | |||||||
| (3) |
| Dichotomous scale: yes–no | |||||||
| (4) | Perceived chance of infection for family members | ||||||||
| (5) |
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| (6) | Perceived risk of SARS transmission in different places (e.g., public transport, office, regions) | ||||||||
| (7) | Percent “very large or large” | ||||||||
| (8) |
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| (9) |
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| (10) | Worry about oneself and family contracting SARS | ||||||||
| Percent “much or very much” | |||||||||
| Leung et al. [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Four random samples; adult Chinese residents, aged 18+; = | Four telephone surveys, 1 and 1.1: prosp. survey, April 2003 and May–July 2003; 2 and 2.1: prosp. survey, May-July 2003; 3: cross-sect. survey, May-June 2003; 4: cross-sect. survey, Dec. 2003 | To aid planning for a possible return of SARS or, more generally, for an outbreak of other infectious diseases | None |
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| Yes |
| 1 = |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., covering mouths when sneezing or coughing, hand washing with soap, face masks, using service utensils for shared food | ||||||
| 1.1 = | Perceived likelihood of contracting SARS during the current outbreak | General anxiety (State Trait Anxiety Inventory) | Health service use | ||||||
| 2.0 = | Perceived likelihood of surviving SARS, if infected | ||||||||
| 2.1 = | Five-point scales: “very unlikely” to “very likely” | ||||||||
| 3.0 = | |||||||||
| 4.0 = | |||||||||
| Leung et al. [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Random sample; adult Chinese residents, aged 18+; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, March–April 2003 | To learn views and beliefs about and psychological responses to SARS | None |
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| Yes |
| To aid public health officials and physicians in planning for a possible expansion of the current outbreak in different parts of the world |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., covering mouths when sneezing or coughing, hand washing with soap, face masks, using service utensils for shared food | ||||||
| Perceived likelihood of contracting SARS during the current outbreak | General anxiety (State Trait Anxiety Inventory) | Health service use | |||||||
| Perceived likelihood of surviving SARS, if infected | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “very unlikely” to “very likely” | |||||||||
| Leung et al. [ | SARS | Hong Kong–Singapore | Random sample adult residents | Cross-sectional telephone surveys, May–June 2003 | To learn the populations’ views and beliefs about and psychobehavioral responses to SARS | None |
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| Yes |
| (1) Hong Kong, aged 18+; |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., covering mouths when sneezing or coughing, hand washing with soap; face masks; using service utensils for shared food | ||||||
| (2) Singapore, aged 21+; | Perceived likelihood of contracting SARS during the current outbreak | General anxiety (State Trait Anxiety Inventory) | |||||||
| Perceived likelihood of surviving SARS, if infected | |||||||||
| Five-point scales: “very unlikely” to “very likely” | Health service use | ||||||||
| Nickell et al. [ | SARS | Toronto, Canada | Personnel from one university hospital with three campus sites, 39.3% below 40 years; | Cross-sectional questionnaire survey, April 2003 | (1) To determine the self-reported psychosocial effects associated with working in a hospital environment during the peak of a disease outbreak, (2) to examine the determinants of these effects | None |
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| No |
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| Perceived death rate for SARS | Concern about personal health | ||||||||
| Three-point scale |
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| Concern about family health | |||||||||
| Three-point scales: “not,” “slightly to somewhat,” “very to extremely” | |||||||||
| Peltz et al. [ | Avian influenza | Israel | Two random samples | Cross-sectional telephone survey, March 2006 during an avian influenza outbreak | To compare the differences in public interest, sense of knowledge, emotions, and compliance during the early phase of an avian influenza outbreak in an affected area compared with a nationwide population of the same country | None |
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| No |
| (1) Adults nationwide, |
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| Perceived likelihood of avian influenza outbreak to become a widespread disease among humans with a high human-to-human-transmission | Feelings of fear, indifference, stress, and hope as a result of outbreak | ||||||||
| (2) Adults from affected area, | Five-point scales | ||||||||
| Quah and Hin-Peng [ | SARS | Singapore | Random sample; adult population, aged 21+; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, during outbreak 2003 | To examine preventive practices, perception of self-health, knowledge of SARS, and appraisal of SARS crisis management | None |
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| Yes |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., cover mouth when sneezing or coughing, hand washing with soap, face masks, using service utensils for shared food | |||||||
| Perceived susceptibility to SARS: perceived likelihood of contracting SARS | Anxiety | ||||||||
| Four-point scale: “very likely” to “very unlikely,” plus “do not know” | Three-point scale: “low”–“moderate”–“high” | ||||||||
| Rambaldini et al. [ | SARS | Toronto, Canada | Random sampling with saturation; medical house staff from university hospitals caring for SARS patients; | Qualitative study based on grounded theory, semistructured telephone interviews May and June 2003 | To explore the perceptions, attitudes, and experiences of medical house staff at hospitals caring for patients with SARS | None | No standardized items; narratives |
| No |
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| Fear and worry | ||||||||
| Concerns about individual safety, close others’ safety |
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| Concern about spreading disease to loved ones | |||||||||
| Social isolation | |||||||||
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| Shiao et al. [ | SARS | Taiwan | Nurses in one community hospital, one secondary, and two tertiary referral hospitals, aged 20–52; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, May 2003, after a SARS outbreak in April 2003 | To determine the perceptions of risk of SARS infection in nurses and factors related to nurses’ consideration of leaving their job because of the SARS outbreak | None |
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| Yes |
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| Behavioral intention to leave job | |||||||
| Perceived risk through job: job puts me at great risk of exposure to SARS | Perceived fatality: poor chance of survival if infected | ||||||||
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| People close to me are at high risk of getting SARS because of my job | My chances of dying from SARS are higher than from cancer | ||||||||
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| My chances of dying from SARS are higher than from traffic accidents | ||||||||
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| Fear of falling ill with SARS | People avoid me because of my job | ||||||||
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| People avoid family members because of my job | ||||||||
| Close others worried for my health |
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| Family believes I have a high risk of getting SARS | Should not be looking after SARS patients | ||||||||
| Close others worried they might get infected through me | |||||||||
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| Personal control over infection | |||||||||
| Seven-point scales: “strongly disagree” to “strongly agree,” + “do not know” | |||||||||
| Tam et al. [ | Avian influenza | Hong Kong | Members of local nursing associations, 50% below 45 years; | Cross-sectional mail questionnaire January–February 2006 | To test the assumption that professional experience with SARS would affect health care workers attitude and preparedness towards the impending avian influenza epidemic | None |
| No | |
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| Perceived likelihood of an avian influenza outbreak in Hong Kong | |||||||||
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| Fear of falling ill with avian influenza | |||||||||
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| Risk accepted as part of job | |||||||||
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| Personal control over infection | |||||||||
| Contemplation of job change | |||||||||
| Avoidance attitude towards patients | |||||||||
| Six-point scales | |||||||||
| Tang and Wong [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Random sample, Chinese community residents, aged 60 and older; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, March–April 2003 | To test the assumption that perceived health threats and efficacy beliefs were the two core dimension of motivation factors in relation to the practice of SARS-preventive behaviors | Health Belief Model and Theory of Planned Behavior |
| Yes | |
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| Protective behaviors, e.g., washing hands with soap, building up body immunity with diet, exercise, rest, ensuring good indoor ventilation, face masks | ||||||||
| Perceived vulnerability with regard to contracting SARS (three items): vulnerability to contracting SARS; knowing or having had contact with infected persons; having respiratory infection symptoms | Health service use | ||||||||
| Four-point scales | |||||||||
| Tang and Wong [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Random sample; adult Chinese residents, aged 18+; | Cross-sectional telephone survey, March–April 2003 | To determine rates of SARS-preventive behavior in adult Chinese with different demographic background; test efficacy of HBM in predicting the practice of target preventive behavior | Health Belief Model |
| Yes | |
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| Wearing face masks | ||||||||
| Perceived vulnerability to contracting SARS (three items): vulnerability to contracting SARS; knowing or having had contact with infected persons; having respiratory infection symptoms | |||||||||
| Dichotomous scales: yes–no + sum score of three items | |||||||||
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| Perceived severity (two items): fearfulness of SARS; worry about Hong Kong becoming a quarantine city | |||||||||
| Four-point scales: “not at all worried” to “very worried” | |||||||||
| Tang and Wong [ | SARS | Hong Kong | Random sample, adult Chinese residents, aged 18+; | Longitudinal telephone survey with two measurement points | To identify psychosocial factors associated with SARS-preventive behaviors and to assess whether preventive health behaviors increased after launching SARS community prevention activities | Health Belief Model, Theory of Reasoned Action/Theory of Planned Behavior, Self Efficacy Theory |
| Yes | |
| (1) | (1) March 17–18, 2003 |
| Protective behaviors, e.g., washing hands with soap, building up body immunity with diet, exercise, rest, ensuring good indoor ventilation, face masks | ||||||
| (2) | (2) March 29–April 1, 2003 | Perceived vulnerability to SARS | |||||||
| Four-point scale |
aFor the purpose of the current review Leung et al. [52] and Leung et al. [49] were counted as one study only as they seemed to refer to partly the same data base
bFor the purpose of the current review Tang and Wong [38] and Tang and Wong [63] were counted as one study only as they seemed to refer to partly the same data base