| Literature DB >> 31581620 |
Jonathan Houdmont1, Raymond Randall2, Alistair Cheyne3, Shaun Davis4, Hannah Evans5, Joanne Faichney6.
Abstract
Postal delivery workers have substantial sun exposure. In the United Kingdom (UK) a high proportion of workers possesses a sun sensitive skin type. This population is at elevated risk for skin cancer, yet uptake of sun safety practices is low. Studies are needed to identify the underlying factors that contribute to the uptake of occupational sun safety practices that may be targeted during behavior change interventions. This study integrated the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and the Transtheoretical Model's stages of change (SoC) as guiding frameworks to identify underlying beliefs that influence UK postal delivery workers' uptake of occupational sun safety practices. Thirty-four workers participated in semi-structured interviews that used the SoC to establish current receptiveness to and adoption of two sun safety practices (using sunscreen of at least sun protection factor (SPF) 30 on exposed skin and wearing a wide-brimmed hat when working outdoors in the summer). Beliefs underlying current practices were elicited in accordance with the TPB and stratified by the SoC. For sunscreen use and wearing a wide-brimmed hat, 64% and 3% of participants were in the action or maintenance SoC, respectively. Behavioral and control beliefs differed by SoC, with those in the earlier stages more likely than those in the latter stages to report negative attitudes to, and difficulty enacting, sun safety practices. Normative beliefs concerning the views of colleagues and employers towards sunscreen were relatively consistent across the SoC. This study highlights the need for tailored and targeted behavior change interventions. The SoC-stratified accounts of the influence of TPB components on behavior provide a basis for bespoke interventions that reflect inter-individual and inter-practice differences in their working mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Theory of Planned Behavior; Transtheoretical Model; postal delivery workers; solar radiation; stage of change; sun safety
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31581620 PMCID: PMC6801953 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16193712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Royal Mail Group wide-brimmed hat.
Participants’ skin type.
| Skin Type | % Participants |
|---|---|
| Type 1: Pale skin, burns easily and rarely tans. Generally have light coloured or red hair and freckles. | 11 |
| Type 2: Fair skin that usually burns, but may gradually tan. | 32 |
| Type 3: Skin that burns with long or intense exposure to the sun but generally tans quite easily. | 32 |
| Type 4: Olive-coloured skin that tans easily, but could possibly burn with lengthy exposures to intense sunshine. | 20 |
| Type 5: Naturally brown skin, with brown eyes and dark hair. Skin darkens easily with sun exposure and only burns with excessive exposure to the sun. | 5 |
| Type 6: Black skin with dark brown eyes and black hair. Skin very easily darkens on exposure to sun and would very rarely, if ever, burn. | 0 |
Percentage of participants reporting each stage of change (sunscreen).
| Stage of Change | % Participants |
|---|---|
| Precontemplation | 18 |
| Contemplation | 18 |
| Preparation | 0 |
| Action | 11 |
| Maintenance | 53 |
| Relapse | 0 |
Percentage of participants reporting each stage of change (wide-brimmed hat).
| Stage of Change | % Participants |
|---|---|
| Precontemplation | 82 |
| Contemplation | 15 |
| Preparation | 0 |
| Action | 0 |
| Maintenance | 3 |
| Relapse | 0 |