Self-affirmation increases defensiveness toward health risk information among those experiencing negative emotions: Results from two national samples

Rebecca A Ferrer, William M P Klein, Kaitlin A Graff, Rebecca A Ferrer, William M P Klein, Kaitlin A Graff

Abstract

Objective: Self-affirmation can promote health behavior change and yield long-term improvements in health via its effect on receptiveness to risk information in behavior change interventions. Across 2 studies, we examined whether the emotional state of the person presented with health risk information moderates self-affirmation effectiveness.

Method: Data were collected from 2 U.S. national samples (n = 652, n = 448) via GfK, an Internet-based survey company. Female alcohol consumers completed an emotion induction (fear, anger, or neutral). They then completed a standard self-affirmation (or no-affirmation) essay-writing task, and subsequently received a health message linking alcohol to breast cancer.

Results: There was a significant interaction between emotion and self-affirmation conditions, such that self-affirmation reduced the specificity of health behavior change plans among those experiencing negative emotion (Study 1: B = -0.55, p < .001), with consistent but not significant effects for anger (Study 2: B = -.47, p = .069. Among self-affirmed participants, essays were rated as significantly less self-affirming for individuals experiencing negative emotion (or anger). Mediation analyses limited to the self-affirmation condition revealed an indirect effect of negative emotion condition on health behavior change plan specificity via self-affirmation ratings of essay content in Study 1: β = 0.04, p = .041.

Conclusions: The salutary effect of self-affirmation on plan specificity was reversed with negative emotion. These findings may be attributed to disruption of the self-affirmation process. Individuals who enter interventions using self-affirmation in a negative emotion state may be less prepared to benefit from other intervention content, and may even be less likely to change health behaviors as a result of the intervention. (PsycINFO Database Record

(c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Behavior Change Plans (mean and standard error). Top Panel: Experiment 1. Bottom Panel: Experiment 2.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Mediation analyses (self-affirmation condition). Top Panel: Experiment 1*. Bottom Panel: Experiment 2.

Source: PubMed

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