Prevalence, Predictors, and Psychosocial Mechanism of Cancer Information Avoidance: Findings from a National Survey of U.S. Adults

2019 
ABSTRACTThe current study examined the prevalence, predictors, and psychosocial mechanism of cancer information avoidance (CIA). With a nationally representative sample, we sought to confirm the prevalence of CIA among Americans. Studies, based on crisis decision theory, have shown that a lack of personal or interpersonal resources to manage threat-related information leads to information avoidance. Cancer information overload (CIO) and cancer fatalism are known predictors of CIA, and these factors were viewed as a lack of personal resources. We measured interpersonal resources by an individual’s network size. Then, to suggest a psychosocial mechanism of CIA, we tested how those personal resources interacted with interpersonal resources. A two-wave longitudinal survey was conducted using a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults (N = 795 at Wave 1 and 626 at Wave 2). Approximately, 4–5 out of 10 adults had low to high levels of CIA, and they avoided the Internet more than any other source. Items t...
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