"How will I ever know I didn't bring it on myself?": Navigating personal responsibility in public health messaging on dementia risk.

Dementia (London, England) Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-13 DOI:10.1177/14713012241270756
Allie Peckham, Molly Maxfield, Dara L James
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Public health messaging increasingly emphasizes the importance of "lifestyle interventions" to reduce dementia risk. Our study aimed to understand how people interpret and respond to information about dementia risk. In a second sub-aim, we examined how these interpretations may contribute to dementia-related lifestyle stigma.

Research design and methods: We engaged in a secondary analysis of 50 semi-structured interviews using a framework approach to understand, from the perspective of community-dwelling middle-aged and older adults, how they may interpret, make sense of, and respond to information about dementia risk and risk reduction. During the interpretive and narrative phase, the authors began to elucidate participant responses analytically and identified that these responses could be interpreted within the health locus of control literature.

Results: Of the 23 participants who discussed dementia risk, 13 felt some sense of personal responsibility and control over their dementia risk. Of those 13, four participants believed they had personal responsibility and control and actively engaged in lifestyle interventions. The remaining nine participants also engaged in lifestyle interventions, aiming to find comfort in knowing they had done what they could to reduce their risk and working to alleviate self-attribution of blame if diagnosed with dementia.

Discussion and implications: The tendency to internalize responsibility may inadvertently contribute to the stigmatization of dementia as a 'lifestyle disease' creating dementia-related lifestyle stigma. Recognizing the multifaceted nature of dementia risk, including environmental and external factors beyond individual control, is essential to combatting the 'lifestyle stigma' increasingly associated with the condition.

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"我怎么知道这不是我自找的?在有关痴呆症风险的公共卫生信息中引导个人责任。
背景和目的:公共卫生信息越来越强调 "生活方式干预 "对降低痴呆症风险的重要性。我们的研究旨在了解人们如何解读和回应有关痴呆症风险的信息。在第二个子目标中,我们研究了这些解释如何导致与痴呆症相关的生活方式污名化:我们采用框架法对 50 个半结构式访谈进行了二次分析,以从居住在社区的中老年人的角度了解他们如何解读、理解和回应有关痴呆症风险和降低风险的信息。在解释和叙述阶段,作者开始对参与者的回答进行分析阐释,并确定这些回答可以在健康控制点文献中进行解释:在讨论痴呆症风险的 23 位参与者中,有 13 位认为自己对痴呆症风险负有一定的个人责任感和控制感。在这 13 位参与者中,有 4 位认为他们有个人责任感和控制感,并积极采取了生活方式干预措施。其余九名参与者也参与了生活方式干预,目的是在知道自己已经尽其所能降低风险时找到安慰,并努力减轻一旦被诊断出患有痴呆症时的自我归咎:将责任内化的倾向可能会无意中将痴呆症污名化为一种 "生活方式疾病",造成与痴呆症相关的生活方式污名化。认识到痴呆症风险的多面性,包括个人无法控制的环境和外部因素,对于消除与痴呆症日益相关的 "生活方式污名化 "至关重要。
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