Publication | Closed Access
The Role of Narrative and Other-Referencing in Attenuating Psychological Reactance to Diabetes Self-Care Messages
118
Citations
67
References
2015
Year
Family MedicineAttenuating Psychological ReactanceNarrative And IdentityHealth PsychologyMental HealthMessage ResistanceSelf-care InterventionSocial SciencesPsychologyRisk CommunicationHealth CommunicationSelf-report StudyDiabetes Self-care MessagesPublic HealthNarrative StructureHealth PolicyHealth PromotionHealth LiteracyHealth CampaignsHealth BehaviorPatient ExperiencePersuasion
This study charts pathways through message resistance to enhance the persuasiveness of diabetes self-care messages. A 2 (narrative) × 2 (other-referencing) × 2 (message) × 4 (order) experiment with adult diabetics (N = 58) tested whether packaging overt recommendations as a story rather than an informational argument (i.e., narrative structure) and highlighting the impact of health decisions on family and friends rather than the individual (i.e., other-referencing) can effectively attenuate psychological reactance to messages encouraging healthy diet and physical activity. Narrative and other-referencing each led to lower perceived threat to choice, less state anger and counterarguing, less negative cognitive responses, more positive attitudes toward the ad and the behaviors promoted, and greater intended compliance with message recommendations. Findings illustrate two strategies that communicators may employ in order to benefit from clear, direct health messages while avoiding the reactance they may provoke. Moreover, findings inform message design for diabetes self-care education.
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