Literature DB >> 30101600

Processing fluency effect of a leaflet for breast and cervical cancer screening: a randomized controlled study in Japan.

Tsuyoshi Okuhara1, Hirono Ishikawa1, Eiko Goto1, Masahumi Okada1, Mio Kato1, Takahiro Kiuchi1.   

Abstract

Processing fluency (the inferred subjective ease with which people process information) has been a topic of increasing research attention in the field of psychology over the past decade. We examined the effect of improving written materials in terms of processing fluency with regard to encouragement for obtaining breast and cervical cancer screening. We randomly assigned 670 women to intervention or control conditions; the 215 who mailed back distributed questionnaires were the study participants. A standard leaflet for cancer screening was mailed to the control group, while the materials mailed to the intervention group were improved in terms of perceptual fluency (e.g., legibility), linguistic fluency (e.g., readability), retrieval fluency (e.g., reducing amount of information) and imagery fluency (having recipients imagine future behavior and events). The screening rate of the intervention group was significantly higher than that of the control group (29.4% vs. 14.2%, χ2 = 7.275, df = 1, p = .007, φ = .184). Improving the processing fluency of written materials may be useful for encouraging individuals to obtain breast and cervical cancer screening.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cancer screening; health communication; patient education handout; processing fluency; written material

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30101600     DOI: 10.1080/13548506.2018.1492732

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Health Med        ISSN: 1354-8506            Impact factor:   2.423


  3 in total

Review 1.  Interventions targeted at women to encourage the uptake of cervical screening.

Authors:  Helen Staley; Aslam Shiraz; Norman Shreeve; Andrew Bryant; Pierre Pl Martin-Hirsch; Ketankumar Gajjar
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2021-09-06

2.  Knockdown of BRCC3 exerts an anti‑tumor effect on cervical cancer in vitro.

Authors:  Feifang Zhang; Qun Zhou
Journal:  Mol Med Rep       Date:  2018-09-26       Impact factor: 2.952

3.  Influence of high versus low readability level of written health information on self-efficacy: A randomized controlled study of the processing fluency effect.

Authors:  Tsuyoshi Okuhara; Hirono Ishikawa; Haruka Ueno; Hiroko Okada; Mio Kato; Takahiro Kiuchi
Journal:  Health Psychol Open       Date:  2020-02-12
  3 in total

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