| Literature DB >> 29650009 |
Christoph Boehmert1, Adam Verrender2,3, Mario Pauli4, Peter Wiedemann2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Regarding electromagnetic fields from mobile communication technologies, empirical studies have shown that precautionary information given to lay recipients increases their risk perceptions, i.e. the belief that electromagnetic fields are dangerous. Taking this finding one step further, the current study investigates whether precautionary information also leads to higher symptom perceptions in an alleged exposure situation. Building on existing research on nocebo responses to sham electromagnetic fields, an interaction of the precautionary information with personality characteristics was hypothesised.Entities:
Keywords: Nocebo effect; Precaution; RF EMF; Risk communication; Risk perception
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29650009 PMCID: PMC5898020 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-018-0377-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Information about WLAN health effects and precautions used for experimental manipulation
| Basic information | Precautionary information |
|---|---|
|
|
|
Note. Translation from German by the first author
The link http://www.bfs.de/elektro does not work anymore. It is still kept here because this is the original experimental material
Sociodemographic characteristics and WLAN use of the participants in the two experimental groups
| Experimental condition | Test statistic for differences | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic information | Basic + precautionary information ( | ||
| Number of females (%) | 27 (42%) | 35 (48%) | χ2 = .46 ( |
| Number of participants in age group (%) | |||
| 18–30 | 43 (67%) | 51 (70%) | Mann-Whitney U-Test |
| 31–40 | 5 (8%) | 3 (4%) | Z = −.23 ( |
| 41–50 | 3 (5%) | 4 (6%) | |
| 51–60 | 6 (9%) | 7 (10%) | |
| older than 60 | 7 (11%) | 8 (11%) | |
| Number of participants with education level (%) | |||
| No graduation | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | Mann-Whitney U-Test |
| Junior high school | 7 (11%) | 7 (10%) | Z = −.343 ( |
| High school | 26 (41%) | 32 (44%) | |
| Bachelor degree | 15 (23%) | 19 (26%) | |
| Master degree (or equivalent) | 16 (25%) | 15 (21%) | |
| Use of WLAN at home | 57 (89%) | 66 (90%) | χ2 = .07 ( |
| Use of WLAN at work/university | 49 (77%) | 55 (75%) | χ2 = .22 ( |
Fig. 1Experimental setup in the measurement room at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Fig. 2Flow of the study
Descriptive statistics of independent and dependent variables in the two experimental groups
| Experimental condition | Test statistic for differences between groups | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic information | Basic + precautionary information ( | ||
| Independent variables | M (90% CI) | M (90% CI) | |
| Mean trait anxiety | 2.22 (2.15–2.29) | 2.23 (2.16–2.31) | tdf = 133 = −.22 ( |
| Mean somatosensory amplification | 2.71 (2.61–2.82) | 2.83 (2.72–2.94) | tdf = 135 = −1.3 ( |
| Sum social desirability | 10.58 (10.05–11.10) | 10.58 (10.02–11.13) | tdf = 135 = .01 ( |
| T0 risk perception WLAN score | 2.56 (2.33–2.79) | 2.59 (2.38–2.79) | tdf = 135 = −.14 ( |
| Mean T1 state anxiety | 1.36 (1.29–1.42) | 1.50 (1.41–1.59) | tdf = 134 = −2.18 (p = .03) |
| Mean T2 state anxiety | 1.29 (1.22–1.35) | 1.42 (1.33–1.50) | tdf = 134 = − 1.96 ( |
| Dependent variables | |||
| Mean symptom difference T3 – T2 | .09 (.04–.14) | .12 (.07–.17) | tdf = 135 = −.65 (p = .52) |
| Mean attributed symptoms | 1.13 (1.09–1.16) | 1.15 (1.11–1.19) | tdf = 135 = −.74 ( |
| Sum of trials with belief to perceive sham EMF format | 1.53 (1.17–1.90) | 2.10 (1.70–2.49) | tdf = 135 = − 1.74 ( |
Means of symptom perceptions at T2 and T3
| Perceived symptom | T2 Mean (SD) | T2 Percent ‘markedly’; ‘strongly’a | T3 Mean (SD) | T3 Percent ‘markedly’; ‘strongly’ a |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ear noise | 2.05 (.87) | 20.4; 6.6 | 1.98 (.95) | 17.5; 8.8 |
| Fatigue | 1.35 (.58) | 5.1; 0 | 1.57 (.76) | 11.7; 1.5 |
| Restlesness or irritability | 1.28 (.51) | 2.9; 0 | 1.25 (.58) | 2.9; 1.5 |
| Sweating | 1.23 (.45) | 1.5; 0 | 1.14 (.39) | 1.5; 0 |
| Concentration difficulties | 1.22 (.53) | 0.7; 1,5 | 1.39 (.67) | 10.2; 0 |
| Dizziness | 1.21 (.43) | 0.7; 0 | 1.39 (.68) | 6.6; 1.5 |
| Drowsiness | 1.20 (.42) | 0.7; 0 | 1.35 (.58) | 5,1; 0 |
| Palpitation | 1.20 (.45) | 2.2; 0 | 1.32 (.56) | 4.4 |
| Feeling of warmth on skin | 1.18 (.44) | 2.2; 0 | 1.26 (.61) | 4.4; 1.5 |
| Dryness of mouth | 1.17 (.46) | 1.5; 0.7 | 1.28 (.61) | 5.8; 0.7 |
| Congestion of nose | 1.17 (.52) | 2.2; 1.5 | 1.15 (.51) | 2.2; 1.5 |
| Headache | 1.14 (.39) | 1.5; 0 | 1.47 (.64) | 8; 0 |
| Blurred vision | 1.11 (.34) | 0.7; 0 | 1.21 (.56) | 2.9; 1.5 |
| Muscle tension or trembling | 1.10 (.33) | 0.7; 0 | 1.16 (.44) | 2.9; 0 |
| Breathlessness | 1.10 (.35) | 1.5; 0 | 1.17 (.49) | 2.9; 0.7 |
| Breathing difficulties | 1.07 (.29) | 0.7; 0 | 1.18 (.50) | 2.9; 0.7 |
| Prickling of skin | 1.07 (.29) | 0.7; 0 | 1.25 (.55) | 5.8; 0 |
| Nausea | 1.04 (.21) | 4.4; 0 | 1.18 (.48) | 4.4; 0 |
| Itching of skin | 1.03 (.21) | 0.7; 0 | 1.12 (.41) | 2.9; 0 |
| Stomach ache | 1.01 (.09) | 0.7; 0 | 1.14 (.42) | 2.9; 0 |
aon a 4-point scale with labels 'not at ll', 'mildly', 'markedly', and 'strongly'
Mean risk perceptions of WLAN devices before and at the end of the experiment
| Risk perception WLAN T0 | Risk perception WLAN T3 | Test statistic for differences between T0 and T3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| M (90% CI) | M (90% CI) | ||
| Whole sample | 2.58 (2.43–2.73) | 2.42 (2.27–2.56) | tdf = 136 = − 2.51 ( |
| Basic information | 2.56 (2.33–2.79) | 2.33 (2.13–2.53) | tdf = 63 = − 2.65 (p = .01) |
| Precautionary information ( | 2.59 (2.38–2.79) | 2.49 (2.28–2.70) | tdf = 72 = − 1.04 ( |
Mediation analyses with T0 risk perception as independent variable and symptom expectation as mediator
| Coefficient | ANOVA | Sobel test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dependent variable | Path | b-weight; t (p) | F (p) | R2 | Indirect effect, b-weight (95% CI) | Z (p) |
| Symptom difference | a | .15; 3.69 (<.001) | 13.65 (< .001) | .09 | ||
| b | .14; 3.71 (<.001) | 17.65 (<.001) | .21 | .02 | 2.57 (.01) | |
| c’ | .06; 3.3 (.001) | |||||
| c | .08; 4.44 (<.001) | 19.70 (<.001) | .13 | |||
| Attributed symptoms | b | .16; 5.69 (<.001) | 20.56 (<.001) | .23 | .02 | 3.07 (.002) |
| c’ | .02; 1.09 (.28) | |||||
| c | .04; 2.66 (.008) | 7.08 (.008) | .05 | |||
| Belief to perceive sham EMF | b | 1.23; 4.40 (<.001) | 23.77 (<.001) | .26 | .19 | 2.79 (.005) |
| c’ | .52; 3.72 (<.001) | |||||
| c | .70; 4.98 (<.001) | 24.78 (<.001) | .16 | |||
Fig. 3Exemplary mediation effect of T0 risk perception on the belief to perceive the sham EMF with symptom expectation as mediator. Note. b = bivariate regression coefficient (paths a, b and c) and semipartial regression coefficient (parth c’, with the variance of ‘mean expected symptoms’ partiallised out of ‘WLAN risk perception score’); *** = statistically significant (p < .001)