Compensatory Health Beliefs Relate to Decision-Making Coherence and Health Patterns
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18061/ojs.v119i2.6709Keywords:
Judgment/Decision Making, Applied Psychology, Cognition, Health, Compensatory Health BeliefsAbstract
This study tested hypotheses that link cognitive decision-making coherence and health behavioral patterns to the endorsement of compensatory health beliefs (CHBs). Structural equation modeling was used to investigate relationships among the latent variables Compensatory Health Beliefs and 2 other constructs: Decision-Making Coherence (measured by resistance to framing, under/overconfidence, applying decision rules, consistency in risk perception, and resistance to sunk cost bias), and Risk Tendencies with Health Consequences (measured by self-control, the Health Behavior Checklist, and risk perception scales). An online, adult, United States sample—recruited through Amazon.com®’s Mechanical Turk (MTurk)—was assessed. The model described key relationships for the MTurk sample. Low levels of Decision-Making Coherence and Risk Tendencies with Health Consequences were associated with increased endorsement of Compensatory Health Beliefs. Results can help clarify the relationship between health-related cognitions and actions, and impact the design of interventions that rely on the use of the CHB scale.
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Copyright (c) 2019 Bethany D. Merillat, Claudia González-Vallejo
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.