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Journal Article

Citation

Wortel E, de Geus GH, Kok G. Scand. J. Psychol. 1995; 36(3): 306-322.

Affiliation

TNO Institute of Preventive Health Care, Leiden, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, Scandinavian Psychological Associations, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7481601

Abstract

Home-related injuries are a major threat to pre-school children in the western world. In this study the behavioral determinants of 18 parental safety measures were assessed. To select behavioral determinants, the Attitude-Social influence-Self-efficacy/barriers model was used with the inclusion of variables from the Health Belief Model and the Protection Motivation Theory. A written questionnaire was completed by 1129 Dutch mothers of pre-school children. Most safety measures were explained (rather) well by the same set of determinants. Main determinants for adopting or not adopting a safety measure were the mother's belief in the necessity of the safety measure according to the child's age, her belief about her partner's opinion on the necessity and her belief about the success of taking the measure. Subsequent important determinants were the mother's belief about the inconvenience and instrumentality of the safety measure; the perceived susceptibility had a minor or moderate influence on most measures. This study did not indicate that more highly educated mothers were more knowledgeable about safety-related subjects. The theoretical implications of this study are discussed.


Language: en

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