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- Title
Participant‐driven salient beliefs regarding abortion: Implications for abortion attitude measurement.
- Authors
Jozkowski, Kristen N.; Bueno, Xiana; LaRoche, Kathryn; Crawford, Brandon L.; Turner, Ronna C.; Lo, Wen‐Juo
- Abstract
Objective: Guided by the Reasoned Action Approach, we used a salient belief elicitation (SBE) to elicit participant‐generated beliefs regarding abortion. SBE is a formative research technique used to elicit people's control (i.e., perceived facilitators and barriers associated with a behavior), behavioral (i.e., perceived positive and negative consequences of doing a behavior), and normative (i.e., influence of important people/peers regarding a behavior) beliefs regarding a particular behavior (i.e., abortion). Methods: We administered our SBE to English‐ and Spanish‐speaking U.S. adults (N = 608) from NORC's AmeriSpeak® panel. We used inductive content and thematic analyses to assess open‐ended questions. Results: We found that participants' control and behavioral beliefs referenced circumstances used to assess abortion attitudes in polling item (e.g., rape) and reasons people seek abortion (e.g., financial reasons) as well as potential negative emotions (e.g., shame) and positive consequences (e.g., autonomy) associated with abortion. Participants indicated pregnant people's partners and people seeking abortion as salient referents. Conclusion: Participants mentioned several contexts reflected in common measures used to assess abortion attitudes by national polls and surveys. However, we also found other relevant circumstances not reflected in common measures and a range of salient referents. We recommend abortion attitudes measures account for these participant‐driven salient beliefs.
- Subjects
SOCIAL attitudes; ABORTION laws; PREGNANT women; ABORTION; PUBLIC opinion polls; THEMATIC analysis; RAPE
- Publication
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell), 2024, Vol 105, Issue 2, p374
- ISSN
0038-4941
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/ssqu.13343