Abstract

Understanding public perceptions about environmental health hazards, exposures, and health impacts can help environmental public health practitioners to target and prioritize community activities, policy needs, and communication strategies. The online cross-sectional 2013 summer wave of the ConsumerStyles survey sampled U.S. adults and used questions from the Centers for Disease Control’s Environmental Public Health Tracking Program to measure public awareness of governmental efforts to track environmental exposures and links to health impacts, as well as perceptions of environmental health issues. Unadjusted and adjusted logistic regressions examined the associations between demographic characteristics and level of awareness of government environmental public health efforts or level of concern about health risks associated with environmental pollutants. Responses were received from 4033 participants, yielding a response rate of 66.0%. More than half of respondents (57.8%) noted concerns about health risks from environmental pollutants. More than one-third (40.0%) of respondents reported awareness of government efforts. Nearly 40% of respondents felt that none of the health impacts listed in the survey were related to environmental issues. Multiple logistic regression models showed that non-Hispanic blacks, other races, females, people with a college or higher education, and people living in the Midwest or South regions were more likely than their counterparts to be concerned about how the environment affects their health. Future work should focus on improving risk communication, filling the information gap on environmental health issues, and understanding how perceptions change over time.

Highlights

  • Risk perception refers to a person’s beliefs about their vulnerability to harm and the severity of a hazard [1,2]

  • This study investigated levels of awareness on government efforts to track environmental exposures and potential health effects and levels of concern related to environmental public health issues

  • The results showed that the majority of respondents were concerned about risks to health from pollution in the environment, and approximately 20% of respondents were unaware of governmental efforts in tracking hazards and possible links to chronic health issues

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Risk perception refers to a person’s beliefs about their vulnerability to harm and the severity of a hazard [1,2]. This is an important concept in public health as it influences the hazards that people are concerned about and how people deal with those hazards [3]. The public evaluates risks based more on their subjective perceptions and intuition as well as inferences from a limited set of information, including media coverage, and less on knowledge of objective risk factors [3]. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 1045; doi:10.3390/ijerph16061045 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call