Abstract

BackgroundBeliefs about causes and responsibility for chronic diseases can affect personal behaviour and support for healthy policies. In this research we examined relationships between socio-demographics (sex, age, education, employment, political alignment, perceived health, household income, household size) and perceptions of causes and responsibility for health behaviour, chronic disease correlates, and attitudes about cancer prevention and causes.MethodsUsing data from the 2016 Chronic Disease Prevention survey in which participants (N = 1200) from Alberta, Canada responded to items regarding how much they believed personal health behaviours, prevention beliefs, and environmental factors (i.e., healthy eating, physical activity, alcohol, smoking, and where a person lives or works) are linked to getting cancer. Participants also responded to questions about causes and responsibility for obesity, alcohol, and tobacco (i.e., individual or societal). Relationships were examined using multinomial logistic regression on socio-demographics and survey items of interest.ResultsMen (compared to women) were less likely to link regular exercise, or drinking excessive alcohol, to reducing or increasing cancer risk. Similarly, men were less likely to link environmental factors to cancer risk, and more likely to agree that cancer was not preventable, and that treatment is more important than prevention. Finally, men were more likely to believe that alcohol problems are an individual’s fault. Left and central voters were more likely to believe that society was responsible for addressing alcohol, tobacco, and obesity problems compared to right voters. Those with less than post-secondary education were less likely to believe that regular exercise, maintaining a healthy body weight, or eating sufficient fruits and vegetables were linked to cancer - or that society should address obesity - compared to those with more education. Households making above the median income (versus below) were more likely to link a balanced diet with cancer and were less likely to think that tobacco problems were caused by external circumstances.ConclusionsThese results provide insight into the importance of health literacy, message framing, and how socio-demographic factors may impact healthy policy. Men, those with less education, and those with less income are important target groups when promoting health literacy and chronic disease prevention initiatives.

Highlights

  • Beliefs about causes and responsibility for chronic diseases can affect personal behaviour and support for healthy policies

  • Current empirical literature has seldom investigated how personal characteristics are related to the attribution of causes and responsibility for chronic disease correlates in the context of their support for intervention options ranging from those focused on individual behaviour change to upstream policy interventions

  • Recognizing the need to understand how personal characteristics are related to the attribution of causes and responsibility for chronic disease in the context of support for a range of chronic disease prevention intervention options, the present study examined the relationships between socio-demographic variables and perceptions of causes and responsibility for health behaviour, chronic disease correlates, and attitudes about cancer prevention and causes

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Summary

Introduction

Beliefs about causes and responsibility for chronic diseases can affect personal behaviour and support for healthy policies. There are numerous interventions that could target social determinants of health, but those focused on individual behaviours are dominant in Western intervention narratives, bolstered by fears of behaviour regulation and nanny-stateism [4, 5]. How a person views the causes and responsibility for chronic diseases can impact personal behaviour choices as well as their support for upstream policies that shape healthy environments [7, 8]. Current empirical literature has seldom investigated how personal characteristics are related to the attribution of causes and responsibility for chronic disease correlates in the context of their support for intervention options ranging from those focused on individual behaviour change to upstream policy interventions.

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