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Hope and cardiovascular health-promoting behaviour: Education alone is not enough
Authors:David B. Feldman  Jonathan R. Sills
Affiliation:1. Department of Counseling Psychology , Santa Clara University , Santa Clara , CA , USA dbfeldman@scu.edu;3. Psychology Service, VA Palo Alto Health Care System , Palo Alto , CA , USA
Abstract:We investigated hope’s ability to predict cardiovascular disease (CVD) knowledge and health-promoting behaviours. Snyder defined hope as the combination of goal-directed planning and motivation, and theorised that high-hope people seek knowledge relevant to goal pursuits. We surveyed 391 Latino and Asian participants undergoing CVD risk screening, nearly all immigrants to the USA. This was a particularly important sample because, in general, these populations are considered underserved and under-researched. Pre-screening hope levels were measured. After screening and education, participants rated perceived importance of behaviour change. Behaviour change (salt/fat intake, exercise, CVD information-seeking and visiting a physician) and CVD knowledge were assessed one month later by telephone. Unexpectedly, hope did not predict knowledge. However, hope predicted self-reported behaviour change, though results differed by ethnicity. Among Asian individuals, hope?×?knowledge predicted reduced salt/fat, CVD information-seeking and physician visits. Among Latino individuals, hope?×?perceived importance of diet change predicted reduced salt/fat and hope?×?perceived importance of exercise change predicted increased exercise.
Keywords:Hope Theory  cardiovascular disease  risk factors  health education  health-promoting behaviour
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