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Risk Communication and Foodborne Illness: Message Sponsorship and Attempts to Stimulate Perceptions of Risk
Author(s) -
Gordon Joye
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
risk analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.972
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1539-6924
pISSN - 0272-4332
DOI - 10.1111/j.0272-4332.2003.00401.x
Subject(s) - perception , food safety , risk perception , feeling , risk communication , hazard , environmental health , medicine , psychology , social psychology , chemistry , organic chemistry , pathology , neuroscience
Foodborne illness represents a serious health hazard in the United States. Since foodborne illness can often be prevented by an individual's behavior, messages aimed at promoting safe food‐handling behaviors should be a major tool to reduce the incidence of foodborne illness. This article argues that to achieve adoption of safe food‐handling practices in the home, food‐safety messages should both stimulate risk perceptions and promote self‐efficacy, feelings that one can successfully enact recommended behaviors. A content analysis of nationally distributed food‐safety messages questioned if messages incorporated these features. Since food‐safety communicators operate in complex environments with multiple and sometimes competing objectives, this study also questioned if sponsorship of foodborne illness prevention messages was related to the amount of content designed to alter risk perceptions associated with foodborne illness. Results of the quantitative content analysis found that copywriters generally included content designed to stimulate risk perception about foodborne illness but virtually ignored self‐efficacy needs of the audience. A marked difference in tendencies to stimulate risk perceptions was found based on sponsorship. Both in volume and proportion, results show that governmentally sponsored messages more aggressively attempted to heighten risk perceptions associated with foodborne illness than did messages sponsored by privately funded communicators.

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