Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.

Biased transmission of health knowledge has far-reaching effects on information reproduction and health-related cognitions. We examined whether transmissions of different types of disorder and etiological information influence recollections of health knowledge and evaluations of patients, by simulat...

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Main Authors: Asha Ganesan, Yoshihisa Kashima, John Emmanuel Kiat, Ilan Dar-Nimrod
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218703
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spelling doaj-37e0dbed4a4a4d62978530ad96e65bd82021-03-03T20:36:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01146e021870310.1371/journal.pone.0218703Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.Asha GanesanYoshihisa KashimaJohn Emmanuel KiatIlan Dar-NimrodBiased transmission of health knowledge has far-reaching effects on information reproduction and health-related cognitions. We examined whether transmissions of different types of disorder and etiological information influence recollections of health knowledge and evaluations of patients, by simulating the digital transmission of information. Transmission chains of four non-interacting persons (i.e., four generations) were formed. The first generation read three vignettes describing fictitious patients with one of three disorders (physiological, psychological, culture-bound) uniquely paired with one of three etiologies (genetic, environmental, unknown etiology). Next, they evaluated patients' well-being, rated desired social distance, and recalled the vignettes. These written recollections replaced the original vignettes for a second-generation of participants, whose recollections were used for the third generation and so on. The framing of disorders affected recollections of etiology, in which culture-bound framings resulted in the poorest recall of etiologies. Participants also perceived the culture-bound disorder as the least serious but desired the most social distance from patients diagnosed with it, when compared to other disorders. The study showed that health information is selectively attended to and reproduced, possibly affected by perceived self-relevance. Faulty recollections and framing of disorders affect health cognitions, potentially instigating biased transmission of disorder- and patient-related narratives.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218703
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Asha Ganesan
Yoshihisa Kashima
John Emmanuel Kiat
Ilan Dar-Nimrod
spellingShingle Asha Ganesan
Yoshihisa Kashima
John Emmanuel Kiat
Ilan Dar-Nimrod
Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Asha Ganesan
Yoshihisa Kashima
John Emmanuel Kiat
Ilan Dar-Nimrod
author_sort Asha Ganesan
title Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.
title_short Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.
title_full Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.
title_fullStr Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.
title_full_unstemmed Transmission of disorder and etiological information: Effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.
title_sort transmission of disorder and etiological information: effects on health knowledge recollection and health-related cognition.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Biased transmission of health knowledge has far-reaching effects on information reproduction and health-related cognitions. We examined whether transmissions of different types of disorder and etiological information influence recollections of health knowledge and evaluations of patients, by simulating the digital transmission of information. Transmission chains of four non-interacting persons (i.e., four generations) were formed. The first generation read three vignettes describing fictitious patients with one of three disorders (physiological, psychological, culture-bound) uniquely paired with one of three etiologies (genetic, environmental, unknown etiology). Next, they evaluated patients' well-being, rated desired social distance, and recalled the vignettes. These written recollections replaced the original vignettes for a second-generation of participants, whose recollections were used for the third generation and so on. The framing of disorders affected recollections of etiology, in which culture-bound framings resulted in the poorest recall of etiologies. Participants also perceived the culture-bound disorder as the least serious but desired the most social distance from patients diagnosed with it, when compared to other disorders. The study showed that health information is selectively attended to and reproduced, possibly affected by perceived self-relevance. Faulty recollections and framing of disorders affect health cognitions, potentially instigating biased transmission of disorder- and patient-related narratives.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218703
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