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- Title
Interventions to Promote Sun Protection Behaviors: What Do We Know About the Efficacy of Health- and Appearance-based Messages and the Role of Cognitions and Emotions?
- Authors
Mahler, Heike I. M.
- Abstract
Human behavior has been implicated as a critical component in the development of a number of diseases, including skin cancer. More than 85% of all skin cancers are attributed to over-exposure to the sun, and two primary types of interventions have been utilized to motivate sun protection practices - those that focus on the health consequences (i.e., skin cancer) and those that highlight the negative appearance consequences (i.e., wrinkles and age spots) of sun exposure. Both health-based and appearance-based interventions have been demonstrated to increase awareness of sun exposure dangers and of recommended risk reduction behaviors. Much of the literature examining the efficacy of appearance-based interventions also contains evidence of behavior change in response to such interventions. The role of consciously accessible attitudes and perceptions as mechanisms of behavior change has been extensively examined, and there is evidence that sun protection interventions may promote behavior change in part by altering various health-related cognitions (e.g., perceived susceptibility to skin damage). However, the role of nonconscious mechanisms in the efficacy of sun protection interventions has received little empirical attention. A growing body of literature, primarily in other health contexts, has demonstrated that behavior is sometimes more strongly predicted by emotions than cognitions, and that processes outside of conscious awareness may affect behavior change. It is suggested that both future sun protection interventions, and health promotion theories in general, could benefit from a thorough examination of the role that emotions and autonomic reactions may play in intervention efficacy.
- Subjects
CANCER treatment; SKIN cancer; BEHAVIOR modification; SUNSCREENS (Cosmetics); MELANOMA; EFFECT of ultraviolet radiation on skin; PROTECTIVE clothing; PREVENTION
- Publication
Social & Personality Psychology Compass, 2015, Vol 9, Issue 5, p238
- ISSN
1751-9004
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/spc3.12173