Self-reported changes in sun protection behaviours at different latitudes in Australia
Loading...
Date
Authors
Djaja, Ngadiman
Janda, Monika
Harrison, Simone
Van der Mei, Ingrid
Ebeling, Peter R
Neale, Rachel E
Whiteman , David C
Nowak, Madeleine
Kimlin, Michael
Lucas, Robyn
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Society of Photobiology
Abstract
Sun exposure is the most important source of vitamin D, but is also a risk factor for skin cancer. This study investigated attitudes toward vitamin D, and changes in sun-exposure behavior due to concern about adequate vitamin D. Participants (n = 1002) were recruited from four regions of Australia and completed self- and interviewer-administered surveys. Chi-square tests were used to assess associations between participants' latitude of residence, vitamin D-related attitudes and changes in sun-exposure behaviors during the last summer. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to model the association between attitudes and behaviors. Overall, people who worried about their vitamin D status were more likely to have altered sun protection and spent more time in the sun people not concerned about vitamin D. Concern about vitamin D was also more common with increasing latitude. Use of novel item response theory analysis highlighted the potential impact of self-reported behavior change on skin cancer predisposition due concern to vitamin. This cross-sectional study shows that the strongest determinants of self-reported sun-protection behavior changes due to concerns about vitamin D were attitudes and location, with people at higher latitudes worrying more.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Photochemistry and Photobiology
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description