TY - JOUR
T1 - Perceived social risk of the next major pandemic
T2 - antibiotic resistance / Percepción social de riesgo de la próxima gran pandemia: resistencia a los antibióticos
AU - Herranz-Pascual, Karmele
AU - Gallego, Lucia
AU - Alkorta, Itziar
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/10
Y1 - 2024/10
N2 - Although there is abundant literature on this new pandemic in biological terms, studies on the associated risk or its perception are very scarce and recent, and show great variability (geography, actors involved…). In addition, studies conducted on the general population are practically non-existent. In order to overcome these challenges, it would be necessary to integrate social perception into studies of antibiotic resistance risk. To evaluate the social perception of risk, a methodology based on the psychometric paradigm was used, applying Slovic’s abbreviated scale to a representative sample. Findings show that the general public considers the risk of acquiring antibiotic resistance to be low or high depending on the characteristics analysed. The factor structure reflects the existence of five factors that explain 60.5% of its variance, the first two corresponding to the classical factors found in the literature: affective and cognitive components of risk perception. One of the most salient conclusions is the difference found in the risk profile between laypeople and experts.
AB - Although there is abundant literature on this new pandemic in biological terms, studies on the associated risk or its perception are very scarce and recent, and show great variability (geography, actors involved…). In addition, studies conducted on the general population are practically non-existent. In order to overcome these challenges, it would be necessary to integrate social perception into studies of antibiotic resistance risk. To evaluate the social perception of risk, a methodology based on the psychometric paradigm was used, applying Slovic’s abbreviated scale to a representative sample. Findings show that the general public considers the risk of acquiring antibiotic resistance to be low or high depending on the characteristics analysed. The factor structure reflects the existence of five factors that explain 60.5% of its variance, the first two corresponding to the classical factors found in the literature: affective and cognitive components of risk perception. One of the most salient conclusions is the difference found in the risk profile between laypeople and experts.
KW - antibiotic use
KW - antimicrobial resistance
KW - environmental impact
KW - health impact
KW - risk perception
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105002613722&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/21711976241280497
DO - 10.1177/21711976241280497
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105002613722
SN - 2171-1976
VL - 15
SP - 277
EP - 295
JO - Psyecology
JF - Psyecology
IS - 3
ER -