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Journal Article

Citation

Shirom A, Toker S, Shapira I, Berliner S, Melamed S. Br. J. Health Psychol. 2008; 13(Pt 2): 257-271.

Affiliation

Faculty of Management, Tel-Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel-Aviv, Israel. ashirom@post.tau.ac.il

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, British Psychological Society)

DOI

10.1348/135910707X180747

PMID

17535494

Abstract

The effects of exposure to terror on physical health were investigated by relating objective exposure to terror and fear of terror to self-rated health (SRH), a proxy measure of health status. Our respondents were apparently healthy (N=4,877, 38% women) adults who completed self-report questionnaires. Objective exposure was assessed by the number of terrorist attacks and their casualties in a respondent's urban area prior to her/his completion of the questionnaire. Using several alternative assessments, objective exposure to terror did not predict SRH for both the genders. As hypothesized, fear of terror negatively predicted SRH for both females and males (beta=-0.04, -0.05, respectively). The effects of subjective and objective exposure were not found to be more pronounced among women relative to men, thus disconfirming our hypotheses in this regard. Our findings suggest that living under continuous fear of terror may adversely influence physical health irrespective of objective exposure.


Language: en

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