4.5 Article

Using the Health Belief Model to Explore the Impact of Environmental Empathy on Behavioral Intentions to Protect Ocean Health

Journal

ENVIRONMENT AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 53, Issue 8, Pages 811-836

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0013916520932637

Keywords

ocean acidification; environmental empathy; health belief model; behavior change; mediation analysis

Funding

  1. High Point University [17-003]

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The study shows that individuals with higher empathy towards ocean health are more likely to perceive the severity and risks of ocean acidification, be willing to take actions to reduce CO2 emissions, and pay more attention to media information. This has important implications for audience targeting and intervention design.
We examine psychological mediating mechanisms to promote ocean health among the U.S. public. Ocean acidification (OA) was chosen as the focus, as experts consider it as important as climate change with the same cause of humanity's excessive carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, but it is lesser known. Empathy is a multi-dimensional concept that includes cognitive and emotional aspects. Previous literature argues that environmental empathy can facilitate positive behaviors. We tested the hypothesis that empathy affects beliefs and behavioral intentions regarding ocean health using the Health Belief Model. We found that higher empathy toward ocean health led to higher perceived susceptibility and severity from OA, greater perceived benefits of CO2 emissions reduction, greater perceived barriers, and keener attention to the media. Beliefs and media attention positively influenced behavioral intentions (e.g., willingness to buy a fuel efficient car). Theoretical and practical implications regarding audience targeting and intervention design are discussed.

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