Publication | Open Access
DOSPERT+M: A survey of medical risk attitudes in the United States
20
Citations
9
References
2013
Year
Medical Risk AttitudesDospert Domain StructureRiskbenefit RatioRisk AnalysisClassical Test TheoryUnited StatesHarm ReductionLogistic AnalysisMedical Decision MakingRisk CommunicationRisk AttitudePreventive MedicineSocial HealthHealth CommunicationRisk ManagementManagementFactor AnalysisPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchDisease Risk AssessmentHealth Risk AssessmentRiskMultilevel ModelingEpidemiologyHealth SystemsPatient SafetyHealth BehaviorRisk Decisions
Abstract Background: The Domain-Specific Risk Taking scale (DOSPERT) has been recommended as a tool for measuring risk attitudes in medical studies, but does not contain items specific to health care. Butler, et al. (2012) developed a medical risk domain subscale for DOSPERT. Objective: To characterize medical risk attitudes in a nationally-representative U.S. sample using the full DOSPERT scale with the medical risk domain add-on (DOSPERT+M), and examine associations with other risk domains. Methods: Members of a nationally-representative online panel (KnowledgePanel®) were randomized to complete pairs of DOSPERT+M tasks (risk attitude, risk perception, expected benefits). We explored relationships among domains through correlational and factor analysis; we tested the hypothesis that the medical risk domain and DOSPERT’s health/safety domains were not highly correlated. Participants: Three hundred forty-four panelists. Results: The medical risk domain subscale had low inter-item reliability in the risk-taking task and moderate inter-item reliability in the other tasks. Medical risk domain scores were poorly correlated with the DOSPERT health/safety domain. Exploratory factor analysis largely recovered the expected DOSPERT domain structure. Conclusion: Attitudes toward risky medical activities may constitute a distinct domain from those measured by the standard DOSPERT items. Additional work is required to develop a medical risk subscale with higher inter-item reliability.
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