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Judging health status: Effects of perceived prevalence and personal relevance.
251
Citations
31
References
1986
Year
Health OutcomeDiagnosisHealth DisparitiesHealth PsychologySocial Determinants Of HealthMedical DiagnosisSocial SciencesHealth CommunicationHealth InequityPublic HealthDisease DiagnosisPerceived PrevalenceHealth PolicyPsychiatryMedicineDiagnostic CriterionApplied Social PsychologyPersonal RelevanceChronic DiseaseHealth BehaviorSocial EpidemiologyHealth DisorderComorbidity
In this article, we show that people's evaluations of the seriousness of a health disorder are influenced by the perceived prevalence and personal relevance of that disorder. As part of a study ostensibly concerned with college students' health characteristics, 60 undergraduates were "tested" for the presence of a fictitious enzyme deficiency. The subjects discovered either that they had the deficiency (deficiency-present subjects) or that they did not have it (deficiency-absent subjects), and were led to believe either that 1 of the 5 people in the laboratory had the deficiency (low-prevalence subjects) or that 4 of them had it (high-prevalence subjects). As predicted, the low-prevalence subjects evaluated the deficiency as more serious than did the high-prevalence subjects. In addition, consistent with the view that personal relevance affects perceptions of health disorders, the deficiency-present subjects evaluated the deficiency as less serious than did the deficiency-absent subjects. The deficiency-present subjects also derogated the validity of the test ostensibly used to diagnose the deficiency compared with other subjects. Finally, the deficiency-present subjects requested more information about the deficiency than did the deficiency-absent subjects.
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