Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour

Malignant melanoma (MM) is mainly attributable to UV exposure and research indicates that maladaptive sun safe beliefs and behaviour need to be changed in order to help reduce MM prevalence in the most at-risk subset of the UK population; fair-skinned young women. Sun safety interventions which are...

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Main Authors: Indiana Cheetham, Jane Ogden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Cogent Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1210069
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spelling doaj-fe48ce37b09844d1a0dd079ffc6d40362021-03-18T16:21:44ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Psychology2331-19082016-12-013110.1080/23311908.2016.12100691210069Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviourIndiana Cheetham0Jane Ogden1University of SurreyUniversity of SurreyMalignant melanoma (MM) is mainly attributable to UV exposure and research indicates that maladaptive sun safe beliefs and behaviour need to be changed in order to help reduce MM prevalence in the most at-risk subset of the UK population; fair-skinned young women. Sun safety interventions which are personalised and appearance-based have been found effective at improving sun safe beliefs and behaviour. To date, no research has explored whether the effectiveness of these interventions can be improved by varying both their format of presentation and temporal framing. In this experimental study, UK fair-skinned young women (n = 65) aged between 16 and 25 rated their sun safe beliefs and behavioural cognitions after being exposed to personalised appearance-based information which varied in terms of format (text vs visual) and temporal framing (immediate vs future). Their sun safe behaviour was also observed. The visual format used the Aprilage® digital sun ageing programme. The results showed that following the visual format intervention participants had significantly lower perceptions of the skin’s ability to heal, and higher levels of observed sun safe behaviour in the form of taking a sunscreen sample and a sun safety educational leaflet compared to those who received the text intervention. No significant effect of temporal framing was found. The results suggest that a visual, personalised, appearance-based intervention may be an effective form of sun safety promotion for young women in the UK.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1210069sun ageinginterventionvisual imagerytemporal framingsun protectionbeliefs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Indiana Cheetham
Jane Ogden
spellingShingle Indiana Cheetham
Jane Ogden
Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour
Cogent Psychology
sun ageing
intervention
visual imagery
temporal framing
sun protection
beliefs
author_facet Indiana Cheetham
Jane Ogden
author_sort Indiana Cheetham
title Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour
title_short Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour
title_full Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour
title_fullStr Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing sun safety in young women: The relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour
title_sort enhancing sun safety in young women: the relative impact of format and temporal framing on beliefs and behaviour
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Psychology
issn 2331-1908
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Malignant melanoma (MM) is mainly attributable to UV exposure and research indicates that maladaptive sun safe beliefs and behaviour need to be changed in order to help reduce MM prevalence in the most at-risk subset of the UK population; fair-skinned young women. Sun safety interventions which are personalised and appearance-based have been found effective at improving sun safe beliefs and behaviour. To date, no research has explored whether the effectiveness of these interventions can be improved by varying both their format of presentation and temporal framing. In this experimental study, UK fair-skinned young women (n = 65) aged between 16 and 25 rated their sun safe beliefs and behavioural cognitions after being exposed to personalised appearance-based information which varied in terms of format (text vs visual) and temporal framing (immediate vs future). Their sun safe behaviour was also observed. The visual format used the Aprilage® digital sun ageing programme. The results showed that following the visual format intervention participants had significantly lower perceptions of the skin’s ability to heal, and higher levels of observed sun safe behaviour in the form of taking a sunscreen sample and a sun safety educational leaflet compared to those who received the text intervention. No significant effect of temporal framing was found. The results suggest that a visual, personalised, appearance-based intervention may be an effective form of sun safety promotion for young women in the UK.
topic sun ageing
intervention
visual imagery
temporal framing
sun protection
beliefs
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1210069
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