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Ticking all the boxes? A systematic review of education and communication interventions to prevent tick-borne disease

Ticking all the boxes? A systematic review of education and communication interventions to prevent tick-borne disease
Ticking all the boxes? A systematic review of education and communication interventions to prevent tick-borne disease
Tick-borne disease has become increasingly prevalent across Europe. Despite the effectiveness of protective behaviors, relatively few people adopt them when in areas where ticks are known to be present. In this systematic review we identified studies that assessed the impact of any educational or behavioral interventions intended to encourage the widespread use of protective behaviors against tick-borne disease. An extensive search of electronic databases returned a total of only nine such studies. Only two of these were fully randomized controlled trials, with the remaining studies using weaker designs and often relying solely on self-reports to assess behavior. The majority of research in this area has not explicitly noted the consideration of any formal psychological theory on how best to promote behaviors that protect health. Nonetheless, the results show that both knowledge of and attitudes towards tick-borne disease are amenable to change, although the stability of these changes over time has not yet been determined. Not all intervention strategies have proved effective, with some producing detrimental effects. More theory-based, methodologically-robust studies are urgently required if we are to gain a better understanding of the most effective strategies for encouraging members of the public to adopt behaviors known to protect against tick-borne disease
1530-3667
817-825
Mowbray, Fiona
0a9e37a7-06c7-4926-95cb-af2d1eb22157
Amlot, Richard
d93f5263-ea24-4b12-b505-f51694220b8e
Rubin, G. James
e2f2b628-96c2-48f9-b628-265139190233
Mowbray, Fiona
0a9e37a7-06c7-4926-95cb-af2d1eb22157
Amlot, Richard
d93f5263-ea24-4b12-b505-f51694220b8e
Rubin, G. James
e2f2b628-96c2-48f9-b628-265139190233

Mowbray, Fiona, Amlot, Richard and Rubin, G. James (2012) Ticking all the boxes? A systematic review of education and communication interventions to prevent tick-borne disease. Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 12 (9), 817-825. (doi:10.1089/vbz.2011.0774). (PMID:22607072)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Tick-borne disease has become increasingly prevalent across Europe. Despite the effectiveness of protective behaviors, relatively few people adopt them when in areas where ticks are known to be present. In this systematic review we identified studies that assessed the impact of any educational or behavioral interventions intended to encourage the widespread use of protective behaviors against tick-borne disease. An extensive search of electronic databases returned a total of only nine such studies. Only two of these were fully randomized controlled trials, with the remaining studies using weaker designs and often relying solely on self-reports to assess behavior. The majority of research in this area has not explicitly noted the consideration of any formal psychological theory on how best to promote behaviors that protect health. Nonetheless, the results show that both knowledge of and attitudes towards tick-borne disease are amenable to change, although the stability of these changes over time has not yet been determined. Not all intervention strategies have proved effective, with some producing detrimental effects. More theory-based, methodologically-robust studies are urgently required if we are to gain a better understanding of the most effective strategies for encouraging members of the public to adopt behaviors known to protect against tick-borne disease

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Published date: September 2012
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 371857
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/371857
ISSN: 1530-3667
PURE UUID: 250d815c-fce7-488b-a215-c0eda9007129
ORCID for Fiona Mowbray: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3297-4163

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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2014 09:29
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:28

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Contributors

Author: Fiona Mowbray ORCID iD
Author: Richard Amlot
Author: G. James Rubin

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