Authors
Allison Earl, Candi Crause, Awais Vaid, Dolores Albarracín
Publication date
2016/1/2
Journal
AIDS care
Volume
28
Issue
1
Pages
79-86
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Compared to European-Americans, African-Americans have greater probability of becoming infected with HIV, as well as worse outcomes when they become infected. Therefore, adequate health communications should ensure that they capture the attention of African-Americans and do not perpetuate disadvantages relative to European-Americans. The objective of this report was to examine if racial disparities in attention to health information parallel racial disparities in health outcomes. Participants were clients of a public health clinic (Study 1 n = 64; Study 2 n = 55). Unobtrusive observation in a public health waiting room, message reading times, and response-time on a modified flanker task were used to examine attention to HIV- and flu-information across racial groups. In Study 1, participants were observed for the duration of their time in a public health clinic waiting room (average duration: 31 min). In Study …
Total citations
2016201720182019202020212022202312255312
Scholar articles