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Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important?

The pursuit of unhealthy behaviors, such as smoking or binge drinking, not only carries various downside risks, but also provides pleasure. A parsimonious model, used in the literature to explain the decision to pursue an unhealthy activity, represents that decision as a tradeoff between risks and b...

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Autores principales: Chao, Li-Wei, Szrek, Helena, Leite, Rui, Peltzer, Karl, Ramlagan, Shandir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4479211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26120373
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author Chao, Li-Wei
Szrek, Helena
Leite, Rui
Peltzer, Karl
Ramlagan, Shandir
author_facet Chao, Li-Wei
Szrek, Helena
Leite, Rui
Peltzer, Karl
Ramlagan, Shandir
author_sort Chao, Li-Wei
collection PubMed
description The pursuit of unhealthy behaviors, such as smoking or binge drinking, not only carries various downside risks, but also provides pleasure. A parsimonious model, used in the literature to explain the decision to pursue an unhealthy activity, represents that decision as a tradeoff between risks and benefits. We build on this literature by surveying a rural population in South Africa to elicit the perceived riskiness and the perceived pleasure for various risky activities and to examine how these perceptions relate to the pursuit of four specific unhealthy behaviors: frequent smoking, problem drinking, seatbelt nonuse, and risky sex. We show that perceived pleasure is a significant predictor for three of the behaviors and that perceived riskiness is a significant predictor for two of them. We also show that the correlation between the riskiness rating and behavior is significantly different from the correlation between the pleasure rating and behavior for three of the four behaviors. Finally, we show that the effect of pleasure is significantly greater than the effect of riskiness in determining drinking and risky sex, while the effects of pleasure and riskiness are not different from each other in determining smoking and seatbelt nonuse. We discuss how our findings can be used to inform the design of health promotion strategies.
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spelling pubmed-44792112015-06-24 Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important? Chao, Li-Wei Szrek, Helena Leite, Rui Peltzer, Karl Ramlagan, Shandir Judgm Decis Mak Article The pursuit of unhealthy behaviors, such as smoking or binge drinking, not only carries various downside risks, but also provides pleasure. A parsimonious model, used in the literature to explain the decision to pursue an unhealthy activity, represents that decision as a tradeoff between risks and benefits. We build on this literature by surveying a rural population in South Africa to elicit the perceived riskiness and the perceived pleasure for various risky activities and to examine how these perceptions relate to the pursuit of four specific unhealthy behaviors: frequent smoking, problem drinking, seatbelt nonuse, and risky sex. We show that perceived pleasure is a significant predictor for three of the behaviors and that perceived riskiness is a significant predictor for two of them. We also show that the correlation between the riskiness rating and behavior is significantly different from the correlation between the pleasure rating and behavior for three of the four behaviors. Finally, we show that the effect of pleasure is significantly greater than the effect of riskiness in determining drinking and risky sex, while the effects of pleasure and riskiness are not different from each other in determining smoking and seatbelt nonuse. We discuss how our findings can be used to inform the design of health promotion strategies. 2015-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4479211/ /pubmed/26120373 Text en Copyright: © 2015. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ The authors license this article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
spellingShingle Article
Chao, Li-Wei
Szrek, Helena
Leite, Rui
Peltzer, Karl
Ramlagan, Shandir
Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important?
title Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important?
title_full Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important?
title_fullStr Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important?
title_full_unstemmed Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important?
title_short Risks deter but pleasures allure: Is pleasure more important?
title_sort risks deter but pleasures allure: is pleasure more important?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4479211/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26120373
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