Background: A substantial proportion of US adults hold fatalistic beliefs about cancer prevention. Although evidence suggests that fatalistic beliefs discourage people from engaging in screening behaviors that can reduce their cancer risk, far less is known about associations between cancer fatalism and other prevention behaviors. We examined sociodemographic correlates of these beliefs and their associations with regular exercise, smoking, and fruit and vegetable consumption with a national sample of American adults. Methods: Data were analyzed from the first wave of the Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS 2003). HINTS used random-digit dialing to complete phone inter-views with adult Americans (N = 6,369). Results: Nearly hal...
Cancer fatalism, which can be understood as the belief that cancer is a death sentence, has been fou...
Background Community misconception of what causes cancer is an important consideration when devis...
This study tested whether the risk perception attitude framework predicted nutrition-related cancer ...
A substantial proportion of American adults hold fatalistic beliefs about cancer prevention despite ...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/79095/1/j.1460-2466.2009.01474.x.pd
Little is known about the correlates of cancer informa-tion avoidance and whether people with negati...
Little is known about the correlates of cancer information avoidance and whether people with negativ...
Information seeking is an important behavior for cancer prevention and control, but inequalities in ...
This study provides information about the public’s familiarity with cancer prevention strategies and...
This research aims to better understand cultural disparities in cancer prevention behaviors. To do t...
Objective: Cancer can evoke long-held cultural beliefs which either facilitate or impede efforts to ...
Abstract Background People's fatalistic beliefs about cancer can influence their cancer prevention b...
IntroductionThe Common Sense Model of illness representations posits that how people think about an ...
Background: Fatalistic beliefs about cancer have been implicated in low uptake of screening and dela...
Alcohol is a carcinogen. Recommendations to reduce alcohol use to lower cancer risk are increasingly...
Cancer fatalism, which can be understood as the belief that cancer is a death sentence, has been fou...
Background Community misconception of what causes cancer is an important consideration when devis...
This study tested whether the risk perception attitude framework predicted nutrition-related cancer ...
A substantial proportion of American adults hold fatalistic beliefs about cancer prevention despite ...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/79095/1/j.1460-2466.2009.01474.x.pd
Little is known about the correlates of cancer informa-tion avoidance and whether people with negati...
Little is known about the correlates of cancer information avoidance and whether people with negativ...
Information seeking is an important behavior for cancer prevention and control, but inequalities in ...
This study provides information about the public’s familiarity with cancer prevention strategies and...
This research aims to better understand cultural disparities in cancer prevention behaviors. To do t...
Objective: Cancer can evoke long-held cultural beliefs which either facilitate or impede efforts to ...
Abstract Background People's fatalistic beliefs about cancer can influence their cancer prevention b...
IntroductionThe Common Sense Model of illness representations posits that how people think about an ...
Background: Fatalistic beliefs about cancer have been implicated in low uptake of screening and dela...
Alcohol is a carcinogen. Recommendations to reduce alcohol use to lower cancer risk are increasingly...
Cancer fatalism, which can be understood as the belief that cancer is a death sentence, has been fou...
Background Community misconception of what causes cancer is an important consideration when devis...
This study tested whether the risk perception attitude framework predicted nutrition-related cancer ...