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Confidence in the safety of blood for transfusion: the effect of message framing
Author(s) -
Farrell Kathleen,
Ferguson Eamonn,
James Virge,
Lowe Kenneth C.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
transfusion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.045
H-Index - 132
eISSN - 1537-2995
pISSN - 0041-1132
DOI - 10.1046/j.1537-2995.2001.41111335.x
Subject(s) - framing (construction) , blood transfusion , medicine , donation , framing effect , safer , surgery , psychology , social psychology , computer science , persuasion , computer security , structural engineering , engineering , economics , economic growth
BACKGROUND: Blood transfusion is a universally used, life‐saving medical intervention. However, there are increasing concerns among patients about blood safety. This study investigates the effect of message framing, a means of presenting information, on confidence in blood transfusion safety. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: The same factual information regarding the safety of blood for transfusion was presented to a sample of 254 adult students (donors and nondonors) as either a gain frame (lives saved), a loss frame (lives lost), or a combined frame (a loss frame expressed in a positive context). This provided a basic two‐way, between‐subjects design with 1) blood donation history (donors vs. nondonors) and 2) message frame (gain, loss, and combined) functioning as the between‐groups factors. It was hypothesized that participants would consider blood safer if information was presented as a gain frame. The role of stress appraisals as potential mediators of the framing effect was also explored. RESULTS: As predicted, participants receiving the gain‐frame information were significantly more confident of the safety of blood for transfusion than those receiving loss‐frame information or both. This was unaffected by donation history or appraisals of stress associated with transfusion. The extent to which blood was considered safe was negatively associated, independently of framing effects, with perceptions that transfusion was threatening. CONCLUSION: Information about transfusion should be conveyed to patients in a form focusing on the positive, rather than the negative, known facts about the safety of blood.