Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence

People regularly make decisions about their health, yet they clearly differ in their ability to successfully make healthy decisions. We sought to understand this important individual difference by developing a scenario-based measure of health competence (HC) modeled from the Situation Judgment Test...

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Main Author: Persich, Michelle Ruth
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2018
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28047
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-280472021-10-02T17:09:22Z Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence Persich, Michelle Ruth People regularly make decisions about their health, yet they clearly differ in their ability to successfully make healthy decisions. We sought to understand this important individual difference by developing a scenario-based measure of health competence (HC) modeled from the Situation Judgment Test (SJT) method. People were required to judge certain responses to health-related scenarios in terms of how healthy the response was and the likelihood that they would enact the response. In study 1, we showed that those with high HC scores tended to participate in less risky health behaviors and more protective health behaviors. In study 2, we used a daily diary methodology to show that HC scores were predictive of daily substance use, healthy eating, impulsivity, and coping. These findings suggest that this HC assessment will contribute to our knowledge of how people make health decisions and how those decisions affect their health. 2018-04-24T19:40:11Z 2018-04-24T19:40:11Z 2017 text/thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28047 NDSU Policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf North Dakota State University
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format Others
sources NDLTD
description People regularly make decisions about their health, yet they clearly differ in their ability to successfully make healthy decisions. We sought to understand this important individual difference by developing a scenario-based measure of health competence (HC) modeled from the Situation Judgment Test (SJT) method. People were required to judge certain responses to health-related scenarios in terms of how healthy the response was and the likelihood that they would enact the response. In study 1, we showed that those with high HC scores tended to participate in less risky health behaviors and more protective health behaviors. In study 2, we used a daily diary methodology to show that HC scores were predictive of daily substance use, healthy eating, impulsivity, and coping. These findings suggest that this HC assessment will contribute to our knowledge of how people make health decisions and how those decisions affect their health.
author Persich, Michelle Ruth
spellingShingle Persich, Michelle Ruth
Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence
author_facet Persich, Michelle Ruth
author_sort Persich, Michelle Ruth
title Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence
title_short Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence
title_full Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence
title_fullStr Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence
title_full_unstemmed Applying the Situational Judgment Test Method to Assess Individual Differences in Health Competence
title_sort applying the situational judgment test method to assess individual differences in health competence
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28047
work_keys_str_mv AT persichmichelleruth applyingthesituationaljudgmenttestmethodtoassessindividualdifferencesinhealthcompetence
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