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Does provision of an evidence‐based information change public willingness to accept screening tests?
Author(s) -
Domenighetti Gianfranco,
Grilli Roberto,
Maggi Jenny Rose
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
health expectations
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.314
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1369-7625
pISSN - 1369-6513
DOI - 10.1046/j.1369-6513.2000.00081.x
Subject(s) - respondent , test (biology) , population , psychological intervention , willingness to pay , odds , medicine , logistic regression , actuarial science , odds ratio , demography , psychology , environmental health , economics , nursing , sociology , paleontology , pathology , political science , law , biology , microeconomics
Objective To investigate whether the willingness of the general population to undergo a screening test of questionable effectiveness for pancreatic cancer is influenced by the quality and the extent of the information provided. Design Randomised study. Setting Switzerland. Participants Representative sample ( N =1000) of the general population aged over 20. Interventions Participants were randomly allocated into two groups ( N =500 each), with one group to receive basic and the other extended quality of information. The information was presented in two hypothetical scenarios about implicit and explicit benefits and adverse events of the screening test. Response rates were, respectively, 80.2% ( N =401) and 93.2% ( N =466). Main outcome measures Stated willingness to undergo the screening test. Results Out of the 401 participants receiving the basic information scenario, 241 (60%) stated their willingness to accept the test, as compared to the 63/466 (13.5%) exposed to the extended one ( P  < 0.001). After adjusting for respondent characteristics through a logistic regression model, the ‘information effect’, expressed in terms of odds‐ratio (OR), shows that provision of additional information was related to a 91% (OR 0.09; 95CI: 0.07 – 0.13) relative reduction in the likelihood of accepting the screening test. Conclusion The quality and the extent of the information provided about the implicit and explicit benefits and adverse events on hypothetical scenarios of a screening test may dramatically change the willingness of people to participate in the testing. This study suggests that provision of full information on the yield of health care interventions plays an important role in protecting the public from being exposed to procedures of questionable effectiveness.

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