| Literature DB >> 26280754 |
Jennifer L Hay1, Marcel Ramos2, Yuelin Li2, Susan Holland2, Debra Brennessel3, M Margaret Kemeny3.
Abstract
Cancer risk perceptions may involve intuitions-including both affect as well as gut-level thoughts about risk-and deliberative risk magnitudes. Yet, little research has examined the potentially diverse relations between risk perceptions and behavior across time. A highly diverse primary care sample (N = 544, aged ≥50) was utilized to compare how deliberative and intuitive perceptions of risk relate to chart-confirmed colorectal cancer screening at cross-sectional and prospective time points. At baseline, deliberative and intuitive risk perceptions were negatively associated with chart-confirmed colorectal cancer screening adherence in bivariable but not multivariable analyses. Among those who were non-adherent with colorectal cancer screening at baseline, deliberative and intuitive risk perceptions were positively associated with prospective uptake of chart-confirmed colorectal cancer screening adherence at 12-months in bivariable analyses; only deliberative risk perceptions remained significant in the multivariable model. This study indicates that diverse risk perceptions are differentially important for screening at different time points.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer risk perceptions; Colorectal cancer screening; Diverse populations; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26280754 PMCID: PMC4724274 DOI: 10.1007/s10865-015-9667-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Med ISSN: 0160-7715