The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewing

Paranormal health beliefs denote the inclination to endorse illusory supernatural notions about well-being and treatment. These ideations are important since they potentially influence perceptions of health and allied behaviors. Noting this, researchers in Italy developed and verified the Paranormal...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andrew Denovan, Neil Dagnall, Kenneth Graham Drinkwater
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2024-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1306372/full
_version_ 1797341219844521984
author Andrew Denovan
Neil Dagnall
Kenneth Graham Drinkwater
author_facet Andrew Denovan
Neil Dagnall
Kenneth Graham Drinkwater
author_sort Andrew Denovan
collection DOAJ
description Paranormal health beliefs denote the inclination to endorse illusory supernatural notions about well-being and treatment. These ideations are important since they potentially influence perceptions of health and allied behaviors. Noting this, researchers in Italy developed and verified the Paranormal Health Beliefs Scale (PHBS). Despite initial promising outcomes, the construct and measurement properties of the PHBS have remained under investigated. This is likely due to the fact that the instrument draws heavily on traditional Italian social, political, and religious influences and is overly culturally specific. Hence, items do not generalize well across populations and nationalities. Acknowledging these factors, this study used cognitive interviewing (think aloud protocol and concurrent probing) to assess the suitability of the PHBS for general use. Concurrently, the intention was to identify necessary modifications that would enhance scale performance. Fourteen interviewees (eight males and six females), evenly distributed across two rounds, participated. Round 1 focused on comprehension and perception of the PHBS. Cognitive interviews identified issues with culturally particular content/points of reference, phraseology, and wording. To address these a modified version of the PHBS was produced. Round 2 then examined the effectiveness of changes. Analysis revealed fewer concerns, although difficulties with ambiguity, complex terminology, and response scale appropriateness persisted. Overall, interviews indicated that a focus on illusory (rather than paranormal) health beliefs would improve scale utility. Methodologically, cognitive interviewing provided invaluable insights into the effectiveness of the PHBS and identified ways in which researchers could adapt the instrument for use with other cultures.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T10:14:42Z
format Article
id doaj.art-7ee0abd52aa64d8fae262c7025b74c27
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1664-1078
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T10:14:42Z
publishDate 2024-01-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Psychology
spelling doaj.art-7ee0abd52aa64d8fae262c7025b74c272024-01-29T04:40:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782024-01-011510.3389/fpsyg.2024.13063721306372The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewingAndrew DenovanNeil DagnallKenneth Graham DrinkwaterParanormal health beliefs denote the inclination to endorse illusory supernatural notions about well-being and treatment. These ideations are important since they potentially influence perceptions of health and allied behaviors. Noting this, researchers in Italy developed and verified the Paranormal Health Beliefs Scale (PHBS). Despite initial promising outcomes, the construct and measurement properties of the PHBS have remained under investigated. This is likely due to the fact that the instrument draws heavily on traditional Italian social, political, and religious influences and is overly culturally specific. Hence, items do not generalize well across populations and nationalities. Acknowledging these factors, this study used cognitive interviewing (think aloud protocol and concurrent probing) to assess the suitability of the PHBS for general use. Concurrently, the intention was to identify necessary modifications that would enhance scale performance. Fourteen interviewees (eight males and six females), evenly distributed across two rounds, participated. Round 1 focused on comprehension and perception of the PHBS. Cognitive interviews identified issues with culturally particular content/points of reference, phraseology, and wording. To address these a modified version of the PHBS was produced. Round 2 then examined the effectiveness of changes. Analysis revealed fewer concerns, although difficulties with ambiguity, complex terminology, and response scale appropriateness persisted. Overall, interviews indicated that a focus on illusory (rather than paranormal) health beliefs would improve scale utility. Methodologically, cognitive interviewing provided invaluable insights into the effectiveness of the PHBS and identified ways in which researchers could adapt the instrument for use with other cultures.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1306372/fullcognitive interviewingillusory thinkingparanormal health beliefsparanormal health beliefs scalequestionnaire scrutiny
spellingShingle Andrew Denovan
Neil Dagnall
Kenneth Graham Drinkwater
The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewing
Frontiers in Psychology
cognitive interviewing
illusory thinking
paranormal health beliefs
paranormal health beliefs scale
questionnaire scrutiny
title The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewing
title_full The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewing
title_fullStr The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewing
title_full_unstemmed The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewing
title_short The paranormal health beliefs scale: an evaluation using cognitive interviewing
title_sort paranormal health beliefs scale an evaluation using cognitive interviewing
topic cognitive interviewing
illusory thinking
paranormal health beliefs
paranormal health beliefs scale
questionnaire scrutiny
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1306372/full
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewdenovan theparanormalhealthbeliefsscaleanevaluationusingcognitiveinterviewing
AT neildagnall theparanormalhealthbeliefsscaleanevaluationusingcognitiveinterviewing
AT kennethgrahamdrinkwater theparanormalhealthbeliefsscaleanevaluationusingcognitiveinterviewing
AT andrewdenovan paranormalhealthbeliefsscaleanevaluationusingcognitiveinterviewing
AT neildagnall paranormalhealthbeliefsscaleanevaluationusingcognitiveinterviewing
AT kennethgrahamdrinkwater paranormalhealthbeliefsscaleanevaluationusingcognitiveinterviewing