Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer

Alcohol is a carcinogen. Recommendations to reduce alcohol use to lower cancer risk are increasingly common. However, neither the beliefs of US adults about alcohol consumption and cancer risk, nor factors influencing those beliefs, are well understood. We used data from the 2019 Health Information...

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Main Authors: Marc T. Kiviniemi, Heather Orom, Jennifer L. Hay, Erika A. Waters
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-09-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335521001236
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spelling doaj-bc5c143a44d3433ba32a0d8dc73e0d892021-08-14T04:30:03ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552021-09-0123101433Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancerMarc T. Kiviniemi0Heather Orom1Jennifer L. Hay2Erika A. Waters3Department of Health, Behavior, and Society University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA; Corresponding author at: 151 Washington Ave., Lexington, KY 40536, USA.Department of Community Health & Health Behavior University at Buffalo, SUNY Buffalo, NY, USADepartment of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Institute, New York, NY, USADepartment of Surger, Washington University at Saint Louis School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USAAlcohol is a carcinogen. Recommendations to reduce alcohol use to lower cancer risk are increasingly common. However, neither the beliefs of US adults about alcohol consumption and cancer risk, nor factors influencing those beliefs, are well understood. We used data from the 2019 Health Information National Trends Survey (analysis N = 4,470) to examine beliefs about whether drinking too much alcohol increases cancer risk. We compared those beliefs to beliefs for three other health problems, and examined whether believing alcohol is a cancer risk factor was related to demographics, risk perceptions, other beliefs about the nature of cancer, and alcohol consumption behavior. Only 33% of US adults reported believing that alcohol is a cancer risk factor; 27% stated that it was not, and the highest proportion (40%) reported they did not know. Misbeliefs and lack of knowledge about alcohol and health outcomes were higher for cancer than other outcomes. Higher age, education, seeking health information, risk perceptions, and pessimistic beliefs about cancer predicted both lack of knowledge and misbeliefs about alcohol use and cancer. However, misbeliefs and lack of knowledge were not limited to those who reported alcohol consumption. Demographic and psychosocial factors are associated with problematic beliefs about alcohol’s role as a risk factor for cancer. Because perceived risk for health problems is a driver of behavior change, cancer prevention and control efforts to reduce alcohol consumption must attend to and address both the misperceptions about and lack of knowledge of alcohol’s role in increasing risk for cancer.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335521001236Alcohol useCancer risk perceptionBeliefs about riskMental modelsUncertainty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marc T. Kiviniemi
Heather Orom
Jennifer L. Hay
Erika A. Waters
spellingShingle Marc T. Kiviniemi
Heather Orom
Jennifer L. Hay
Erika A. Waters
Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer
Preventive Medicine Reports
Alcohol use
Cancer risk perception
Beliefs about risk
Mental models
Uncertainty
author_facet Marc T. Kiviniemi
Heather Orom
Jennifer L. Hay
Erika A. Waters
author_sort Marc T. Kiviniemi
title Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer
title_short Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer
title_full Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer
title_fullStr Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer
title_full_unstemmed Limitations in American adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer
title_sort limitations in american adults’ awareness of and beliefs about alcohol as a risk factor for cancer
publisher Elsevier
series Preventive Medicine Reports
issn 2211-3355
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Alcohol is a carcinogen. Recommendations to reduce alcohol use to lower cancer risk are increasingly common. However, neither the beliefs of US adults about alcohol consumption and cancer risk, nor factors influencing those beliefs, are well understood. We used data from the 2019 Health Information National Trends Survey (analysis N = 4,470) to examine beliefs about whether drinking too much alcohol increases cancer risk. We compared those beliefs to beliefs for three other health problems, and examined whether believing alcohol is a cancer risk factor was related to demographics, risk perceptions, other beliefs about the nature of cancer, and alcohol consumption behavior. Only 33% of US adults reported believing that alcohol is a cancer risk factor; 27% stated that it was not, and the highest proportion (40%) reported they did not know. Misbeliefs and lack of knowledge about alcohol and health outcomes were higher for cancer than other outcomes. Higher age, education, seeking health information, risk perceptions, and pessimistic beliefs about cancer predicted both lack of knowledge and misbeliefs about alcohol use and cancer. However, misbeliefs and lack of knowledge were not limited to those who reported alcohol consumption. Demographic and psychosocial factors are associated with problematic beliefs about alcohol’s role as a risk factor for cancer. Because perceived risk for health problems is a driver of behavior change, cancer prevention and control efforts to reduce alcohol consumption must attend to and address both the misperceptions about and lack of knowledge of alcohol’s role in increasing risk for cancer.
topic Alcohol use
Cancer risk perception
Beliefs about risk
Mental models
Uncertainty
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335521001236
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