At a glance
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Improving the Behavioural Impact of Air Quality Alerts in London
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Alternative health advice for Pollution; Exposure and Health Behavior. Completed, enrolled 225 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The evidence shows that adherence to air quality advice to adopt protective behaviours during pollution episodes is suboptimal, and that the traditional strategy of simply informing people about high pollution episodes is not effective. The aim of the present study was to investigate how to improve the behavioural impact of existing air quality alert messages through a systematic manipulation of key communication variables, including perceived susceptibility, self-efficacy, response efficacy, planning, message specificity, etc. Users of an existing air quality alert smartphone application in London, who agreed to take part in the study, were randomly allocated to a control group (i.e. receiving usual health advice associated with the official UK Air Quality Index) or an intervention group receiving health advice associated with air quality alerts in an alternative format (i.e. targeting key variables). Both intended and actual adherence behaviours were investigated. Qualitative data were also collected to understand the reasons for not adopting protective behaviours in response to receiving a real air pollution alert. Implications of this study include the potential to increase protective behaviours in the general population during air pollution episodes through the development of more effective communication strategies provided via existent air quality alert systems.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
These messages targeted specific beliefs about air pollution and protective actions aimed at reducing exposure to air pollution. In addition, message specificity was targeted, which means that compared to the usual messages, the alternative messages reported more detailed health recommendations.