Personal, Interpersonal, and Media Predictors of Fear of Ebola

J. Dillard, Chun Yang
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Fear of infectious disease has the potential to damage local economies, disrupt health care delivery systems, and diminish immune functioning, whether or not the risk is objectively high. The appearance of Ebola in the United States offered an opportunity to study the causes of fear in a real-world event. Shortly after the death of the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the United States, survey data were gathered (N = 849) from residents of Dallas and U.S. citizens outside of Texas. Fear was positively associated with age (younger), gender (female), and ethnicity (non-White), but not geographic proximity (Dallas vs. not Dallas). Exposure to Ebola-related information via interpersonal channels (friends/family, acquaintances/coworkers) corresponded with higher levels of fear, but the findings for media channels were more varied, showing positive effects (newspapers/magazines), negative effects (Internet), and null effects (TV/radio). The study provides insight into the personal, interpersonal, and media correlates of fear of Ebola.
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个人、人际和媒体对埃博拉恐惧的预测
对传染病的恐惧有可能破坏当地经济,扰乱卫生保健提供系统,并削弱免疫功能,无论客观上风险是否高。埃博拉病毒在美国的出现为研究现实世界事件中恐惧的原因提供了一个机会。在美国确诊的第一位埃博拉患者死亡后不久,从达拉斯居民和德克萨斯州以外的美国公民中收集了调查数据(N = 849)。恐惧与年龄(年轻)、性别(女性)和种族(非白人)呈正相关,但与地理距离(达拉斯vs非达拉斯)无关。通过人际渠道(朋友/家人、熟人/同事)接触埃博拉相关信息与较高的恐惧水平相对应,但媒体渠道的发现更为多样化,显示出积极影响(报纸/杂志)、消极影响(互联网)和无效影响(电视/广播)。这项研究提供了对埃博拉恐惧的个人、人际和媒体相关性的见解。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
审稿时长
12 weeks
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