
Volume 32, Issue 1: February, 2005
Abstract
Testing the Theoretical Design of a Health Risk Message:
Reexamining the Major Tenets of the Extended Parallel Process
Model
Thomas D. Gore and Cheryl Campanella Bracken, PhD
This study examined the fear control/danger control responses
that are predicted by the Extended Parallel Process Model
(EPPM). In a campaign designed to inform college students
about the symptoms and dangers of meningitis, participants
were given either a high-threat/no-efficacy or high-efficacy/no-threat
health risk message, thus testing the extreme assumptions
of the EPPM. Although the study supports the main predictions
of the EPPM in the context of meningitis, the results provide
new evidence that only a marginal amount of threat is necessary
in a health risk message to move the target audience toward
the desired protective measures. In addition, the results
also suggest that the messages containing only threat may
only scare the target audience further into fear control.
Implications and future research are discussed.
|