What do friends and media tell us? How different information channels affect women’s risk perceptions of age-related female infertility
Abstract
Based on a survey given to a random sample of Swedish 20-40 year old females, this paper
investigates through which channels women receive information about the general risk levels
of age-related female infertility and how the different channels affect women’s perceptions of
the risk. We find that the media reach women of all ages, while only about one woman in four
has received information from the health care system. We also found that what peers say and
do strongly affect women’s risk perceptions: The respondents who had obtained information
from friends and relatives were more likely to state too high risks, while a woman with close
friends or relatives who became pregnant at age 35 or older was more likely to have a correct
perception of the risks. Since women are most interested in receiving information from the
health care system, we argue that health care workers should inform women earlier than what
happens today.
University
Göteborg University, School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007-03-16Author
Lampi, Elina
Keywords
Information
Media
Health care
Infertility
General risk
JEL-Codes: D81, D83, I10, J13
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
246
Language
eng