2015
DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckv018
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Media use, cancer knowledge and lifestyle choices: a cross-sectional analysis

Abstract: These results indicate that higher levels of television exposure coincide with less cancer knowledge and with less healthy lifestyle choices. It offers a pathway for intervention by suggesting that improving cancer knowledge through television might positively affect lifestyle choices.

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“…Television, as an example, has become a commercial media that fulfills what the audience wants. The results of a previous study (Nelissen, Beullens, Lemal, & Bulck, 2015) show that television has been a significant negative predictor of a healthy lifestyle. The study discovered that the higher the intensity of a person watching television, the less healthy the lifestyle one would have.…”
Section: Literature Review Risky Sexual Behavior and Social Mediamentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Television, as an example, has become a commercial media that fulfills what the audience wants. The results of a previous study (Nelissen, Beullens, Lemal, & Bulck, 2015) show that television has been a significant negative predictor of a healthy lifestyle. The study discovered that the higher the intensity of a person watching television, the less healthy the lifestyle one would have.…”
Section: Literature Review Risky Sexual Behavior and Social Mediamentioning
confidence: 89%