Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey

Background: Global warming has significant negative consequences for human health, with some groups at greater risk than others. The extent to which the public is aware of these risks is unclear; the limited extant research has yielded discrepant findings. Objectives: This paper describes Americans&...

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Main Authors: Edward W. Maibach, Jennifer M. Kreslake, Connie Roser-Renouf, Seth Rosenthal, Geoff Feinberg, Anthony A. Leiserowitz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Levy Library Press 2015-11-01
Series:Annals of Global Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/1512
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spelling doaj-c66f44c4a1f843eca56b675bb9f17c1c2020-11-24T22:04:19ZengLevy Library PressAnnals of Global Health2214-99962015-11-0181339640910.1016/j.aogh.2015.08.0101415Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National SurveyEdward W. Maibach0Jennifer M. Kreslake1Connie Roser-Renouf2Seth Rosenthal3Geoff Feinberg4Anthony A. Leiserowitz5Center for Climate Change Communication, Department of Communication at George Mason University, Fairfax, VACenter for Climate Change Communication, Department of Communication at George Mason University, Fairfax, VACenter for Climate Change Communication, Department of Communication at George Mason University, Fairfax, VAYale Project on Climate Change Communication, Department of Forestry & Environmental Studies at Yale University, New Haven, CTYale Project on Climate Change Communication, Department of Forestry & Environmental Studies at Yale University, New Haven, CTYale Project on Climate Change Communication, Department of Forestry & Environmental Studies at Yale University, New Haven, CTBackground: Global warming has significant negative consequences for human health, with some groups at greater risk than others. The extent to which the public is aware of these risks is unclear; the limited extant research has yielded discrepant findings. Objectives: This paper describes Americans' awareness of the health effects of global warming, levels of support for government funding and action on the issue, and trust in information sources. We also investigate the discrepancy in previous research findings between assessments based on open- versus closed-ended questions. Methods: A nationally representative survey of US adults (N = 1275) was conducted online in October 2014. Measures included general attitudes and beliefs about global warming, affective assessment of health effects, <a title="Learn more about Vulnerable Populations" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/vulnerable-populations">vulnerable populations</a> and specific health conditions (open- and closed-ended), perceived risk, trust in sources, and support for government response. Findings: Most respondents (61%) reported that, before taking the survey, they had given little or no thought to how global warming might affect people's health. In response to a closed-ended question, many respondents (64%) indicated global warming is harmful to health, yet in response to an open-ended question, few (27%) accurately named one or more specific type of harm. In response to a closed-ended question, 33% indicated some groups are more affected than others, yet on an open-ended question only 25% were able to identify any disproportionately affected populations. Perhaps not surprising given these findings, respondents demonstrated only limited support for a government response: less than 50% of respondents said government should be doing more to protect against <a title="Learn more about Health Harm" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/health-harm">health harms</a> from global warming, and about 33% supported increased funding to public health agencies for this purpose. Respondents said their primary care physician is their most trusted source of information on this topic, followed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, and their local public health department. Conclusions: Most Americans report a general sense that global warming can be harmful to health, but relatively few understand the types of harm it causes or who is most likely to be affected. Perhaps as a result, there is only moderate support for an expanded public health response. Primary care physicians and public health officials appear well positioned to educate the public about the health relevance of climate changehttps://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/1512climate changeglobal warminghealth effectsrisk perceptionpublic healthhealth communication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edward W. Maibach
Jennifer M. Kreslake
Connie Roser-Renouf
Seth Rosenthal
Geoff Feinberg
Anthony A. Leiserowitz
spellingShingle Edward W. Maibach
Jennifer M. Kreslake
Connie Roser-Renouf
Seth Rosenthal
Geoff Feinberg
Anthony A. Leiserowitz
Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey
Annals of Global Health
climate change
global warming
health effects
risk perception
public health
health communication
author_facet Edward W. Maibach
Jennifer M. Kreslake
Connie Roser-Renouf
Seth Rosenthal
Geoff Feinberg
Anthony A. Leiserowitz
author_sort Edward W. Maibach
title Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey
title_short Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey
title_full Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey
title_fullStr Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey
title_full_unstemmed Do Americans Understand That Global Warming Is Harmful to Human Health? Evidence From a National Survey
title_sort do americans understand that global warming is harmful to human health? evidence from a national survey
publisher Levy Library Press
series Annals of Global Health
issn 2214-9996
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Background: Global warming has significant negative consequences for human health, with some groups at greater risk than others. The extent to which the public is aware of these risks is unclear; the limited extant research has yielded discrepant findings. Objectives: This paper describes Americans' awareness of the health effects of global warming, levels of support for government funding and action on the issue, and trust in information sources. We also investigate the discrepancy in previous research findings between assessments based on open- versus closed-ended questions. Methods: A nationally representative survey of US adults (N = 1275) was conducted online in October 2014. Measures included general attitudes and beliefs about global warming, affective assessment of health effects, <a title="Learn more about Vulnerable Populations" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/vulnerable-populations">vulnerable populations</a> and specific health conditions (open- and closed-ended), perceived risk, trust in sources, and support for government response. Findings: Most respondents (61%) reported that, before taking the survey, they had given little or no thought to how global warming might affect people's health. In response to a closed-ended question, many respondents (64%) indicated global warming is harmful to health, yet in response to an open-ended question, few (27%) accurately named one or more specific type of harm. In response to a closed-ended question, 33% indicated some groups are more affected than others, yet on an open-ended question only 25% were able to identify any disproportionately affected populations. Perhaps not surprising given these findings, respondents demonstrated only limited support for a government response: less than 50% of respondents said government should be doing more to protect against <a title="Learn more about Health Harm" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/health-harm">health harms</a> from global warming, and about 33% supported increased funding to public health agencies for this purpose. Respondents said their primary care physician is their most trusted source of information on this topic, followed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, and their local public health department. Conclusions: Most Americans report a general sense that global warming can be harmful to health, but relatively few understand the types of harm it causes or who is most likely to be affected. Perhaps as a result, there is only moderate support for an expanded public health response. Primary care physicians and public health officials appear well positioned to educate the public about the health relevance of climate change
topic climate change
global warming
health effects
risk perception
public health
health communication
url https://annalsofglobalhealth.org/articles/1512
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