Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.

Pests in the home are a health risk because they can be vectors for infectious disease, contribute to allergies and cause damage to buildings. The aims of this study were to record which categories of pests were reported in homes and to use a social cognition model, the health belief model, to inves...

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Main Authors: Stefan A Lipman, Sara A Burt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5746277?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-85d23d80287648fd901e54cadbc125992020-11-25T00:25:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011212e019039910.1371/journal.pone.0190399Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.Stefan A LipmanSara A BurtPests in the home are a health risk because they can be vectors for infectious disease, contribute to allergies and cause damage to buildings. The aims of this study were to record which categories of pests were reported in homes and to use a social cognition model, the health belief model, to investigate which psychological factors influence householders' intentions to control pests. An online questionnaire was completed by 413 respondents between 11 September and 31 November 2015. A large majority of respondents reported pests in or around their home within the previous year. The prevalences were: flying insects 98%, crawling insects 85%, rodents 62%, birds 58%, and moles 20%. Regression analysis for the health belief model revealed that perceiving greater benefits and fewer barriers to pest control and expecting severe consequences of zoonotic infections predicted higher intention to control pests. Intentions towards pest control were not influenced by perceiving oneself as susceptible to catching a disease from pests or health motivation (striving towards a healthy lifestyle). Intentions to engage in pest control were lower for households reporting bird prevalence. The findings suggest that interventions aimed at improving the effectiveness of domestic pest control should focus on increasing the benefits that individuals associate with effective pest control, lowering barriers, and on underlining the severity of the diseases that pests may carry.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5746277?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefan A Lipman
Sara A Burt
spellingShingle Stefan A Lipman
Sara A Burt
Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Stefan A Lipman
Sara A Burt
author_sort Stefan A Lipman
title Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.
title_short Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.
title_full Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.
title_fullStr Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.
title_full_unstemmed Self-reported prevalence of pests in Dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.
title_sort self-reported prevalence of pests in dutch households and the use of the health belief model to explore householders' intentions to engage in pest control.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Pests in the home are a health risk because they can be vectors for infectious disease, contribute to allergies and cause damage to buildings. The aims of this study were to record which categories of pests were reported in homes and to use a social cognition model, the health belief model, to investigate which psychological factors influence householders' intentions to control pests. An online questionnaire was completed by 413 respondents between 11 September and 31 November 2015. A large majority of respondents reported pests in or around their home within the previous year. The prevalences were: flying insects 98%, crawling insects 85%, rodents 62%, birds 58%, and moles 20%. Regression analysis for the health belief model revealed that perceiving greater benefits and fewer barriers to pest control and expecting severe consequences of zoonotic infections predicted higher intention to control pests. Intentions towards pest control were not influenced by perceiving oneself as susceptible to catching a disease from pests or health motivation (striving towards a healthy lifestyle). Intentions to engage in pest control were lower for households reporting bird prevalence. The findings suggest that interventions aimed at improving the effectiveness of domestic pest control should focus on increasing the benefits that individuals associate with effective pest control, lowering barriers, and on underlining the severity of the diseases that pests may carry.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5746277?pdf=render
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