Effects of tailoring ingredients in auditory persuasive health messages on fruit and vegetable intake.

Auteur(s) :
Dijkstra A., Elbert SP., Rozema AD.
Date :
Mar, 2017
Source(s) :
Psychology & health. # p1-17
Adresse :
a Department of Social Psychology , University of Groningen , Groningen , The Netherlands.

Sommaire de l'article

OBJECTIVE
Health messages can be tailored by applying different tailoring ingredients, among which personalisation, feedback and adaptation. This experiment investigated the separate effects of these tailoring ingredients on behaviour in auditory health persuasion. Furthermore, the moderating effect of self-efficacy was assessed.

DESIGN
The between-participants design consisted of four conditions. A generic health message served as a control condition; personalisation was applied using the recipient's first name, feedback was given on the personal state, or the message was adapted to the recipient's value.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
The study consisted of a pre-test questionnaire (measuring fruit and vegetable intake and perceived difficulty of performing these behaviours, indicating self-efficacy), exposure to the auditory message and a follow-up questionnaire measuring fruit and vegetable intake two weeks after message exposure (n = 112).

RESULTS
ANCOVAs showed no main effect of condition on either fruit or vegetable intake, but a moderation was found on vegetable intake: When self-efficacy was low, vegetable intake was higher after listening to the personalisation message. No significant differences between the conditions were found when self-efficacy was high.

CONCLUSION
Individuals with low self-efficacy seemed to benefit from incorporating personalisation, but only regarding vegetable consumption. This finding warrants further investigation in tailoring research.

Source : Pubmed
Retour