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Original Articles

Understanding Associations between Information Seeking and Scanning and Health Risk Behaviors: An Early Test of the Structural Influence Model

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Pages 315-325 | Published online: 06 Jan 2017
 

ABSTRACT

This study examined proposed direct and mediating relationships in the Structural Influence Model (SIM) of Communication within the chronic disease context. Using data from the Annenberg National Health Communication Survey (N = 14,472), we tested the potential mediating roles of information seeking, information scanning, and social capital between social determinants of health and four chronic disease risk behaviors: exercise level, fruit and vegetable intake, cigarette smoking, and excessive alcohol use. Information seeking, information scanning, and social capital received support as potential mediators. Our results are largely consistent with predictions of the SIM and highlight the important role of communication in reducing health risks and increasing healthy behaviors.

Notes

1 Surveys were not collected in February 2005, September 2006, and September 2008.

2 Assignment to these questions was random. Thus, for example, some participants answered items about either information seeking or information scanning, some participants answered items about both information seeking and information scanning, and some participants did not answer either set of items.

3 Hayes (Citation2013) recommends asymmetric confidence intervals, such as bias-corrected, instead of symmetric when using the bootstrapping method to estimate confidence intervals.

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