Author: Monzani, Dario; Marinucci, Marco; Pancani, Luca; Rusconi, Patrice; Mazzoni, Davide; Pravettoni, Gabriella
Title: Thinking of future as an older individual increases perceived risks for ageâ€related diseases but not for COVIDâ€19 Cord-id: tttir4dn Document date: 2021_6_24
ID: tttir4dn
Snippet: Actively thinking of one's future as an older individual could increase perceived risk and risk aversion. This could be particularly relevant for COVIDâ€19, if we consider the common representation of the risk of being infected by COVIDâ€19 as associated with being older. Increased perceived risk could bear consequences on the adoption of preventive behaviours. Thus, we investigated whether increasing the salience of individuals' future as an older adult would impact on their perceived risk fo
Document: Actively thinking of one's future as an older individual could increase perceived risk and risk aversion. This could be particularly relevant for COVIDâ€19, if we consider the common representation of the risk of being infected by COVIDâ€19 as associated with being older. Increased perceived risk could bear consequences on the adoption of preventive behaviours. Thus, we investigated whether increasing the salience of individuals' future as an older adult would impact on their perceived risk for COVIDâ€19 and medical conditions varying for ageâ€relatedness. One hundred and fortyâ€four Italian adults (M (age) = 27.72, range: 18–56) were randomly assigned to either a future as older adult thinking or control condition. Perceived risk for COVIDâ€19 and other strongly, and weakly ageâ€related medical conditions during the lifetime was measured. Results showed that thinking about the future as an older adult increased perceived risk for strongly and weakly ageâ€related diseases, but not for COVIDâ€19. The salience of the COVIDâ€19 outbreak may have raised the perceived risks in both experimental conditions, making the manipulation ineffective. In conclusion, manipulating futureâ€oriented thinking might be a successful communication strategy to increase people's perceived risk of common diseases, but it might not work for highly salient pathologies such as COVIDâ€19.
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