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Paper Title

Beyond Medical Risk: Investigating the Psychological Factors Underlying Women's Perceptions of Susceptibility to Breast Cancer, Heart Disease, and Osteoporosis

Keywords

  • Perceived Susceptibility
  • Breast Cancer
  • Heart Disease
  • Osteoporosis
  • Psychological Factors
  • Epidemiological Risk
  • Cognitive Heuristics
  • Perceived Similarity
  • Perceived Prevalence
  • Age
  • Confirmatory Factor Analysis
  • Comparative Risk
  • Community Sample

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 23 | Issue : 3 | Page No : 247–258

Published On

May, 2004

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Abstract

The relationships of epidemiological (objective) risk indices, perceived disease characteristics, and cognitive heuristics to women's perceived susceptibility to breast cancer, heart disease, and osteoporosis in a community sample of 312 women ages 40-86 were examined. Epidemiological indices accounted for a small to moderate proportion of the variance in perceived susceptibility. Psychological factors (perceived similarity to women who contract the target disease and perceived disease prevalence) predicted perceived susceptibility above and beyond medical risk factors. Opposite to actual risk, age correlated negatively with perceived susceptibility to all 3 diseases. Exploratory analyses suggested that perceived similarity, perceived prevalence, and absent/exempt beliefs might mediate this relationship. Confirmatory factor analyses verified that measures of absolute and direct comparative risk assess the same underlying construct of perceived susceptibility.

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