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Journal Article

Citation

Murray-Johnson L, Witte K, Patel D, Orrego V, Zuckerman C, Maxfield AM, Thimons ED. Health Educ. Behav. 2004; 31(6): 741-755.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1090198104263396

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Occupational noise-induced hearing loss is the second most self-reported occupational illness or injury in the United States. Among coal miners, more than 90% of the population reports a hearing deficit by age 55. In this formative evaluation, focus groups were conducted with coal miners in Appalachia to ascertain whether miners perceive hearing loss as a major health risk and if so, what would motivate the consistent wearing of hearing protection devices (HPDs). The theoretical framework of the Extended Parallel Process Model was used to identify the miners' knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, and current behaviors regarding hearing protection. Focus group participants had strong perceived severity and varying levels of perceived susceptibility to hearing loss. Various barriers significantly reduced the self-efficacy and the response efficacy of using hearing protection.


Language: en

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