Published on in Vol 26 (2024)

This is a member publication of National University of Singapore

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/49383, first published .
Examining the Role of Information Behavior in Linking Cancer Risk Perception and Cancer Worry to Cancer Fatalism in China: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Examining the Role of Information Behavior in Linking Cancer Risk Perception and Cancer Worry to Cancer Fatalism in China: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Examining the Role of Information Behavior in Linking Cancer Risk Perception and Cancer Worry to Cancer Fatalism in China: Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Authors of this article:

Lianshan Zhang1 Author Orcid Image ;   Shaohai Jiang2 Author Orcid Image

Journals

  1. Chen J, Wu X, Chen X, Wei X. An Investigation into Risk Perception among First-degree Relatives of Patients with Colorectal Cancer and Relevant Influencing Factors. Asian Oncology Nursing 2024;24(3):135 View
  2. Wang T, Guo Y, Zhao K, Tang C, Xu Q. The relationship between time perspective and fear of cancer recurrence among Chinese gastric cancer patients: the chain mediating role of rumination and catastrophizing. Supportive Care in Cancer 2025;33(4) View
  3. Suo R, Pan Q, Wu Y, Li F, Wang R, Ye F, Zhong H. The relationships among breast cancer-related prevention behavior, attitude, knowledge and fatalism in Chinese women with benign breast tumors. Psychology, Health & Medicine 2025:1 View
  4. Westerlinck P, Maes N, Coucke P. Assessing the Effect of a Mobile Application on Cancer Risk Health Literacy: A Cross-Sectional Study Design. Applied Clinical Informatics 2025;16(02):447 View
  5. Uncu F, Evcimen H, Çiftci N, Yıldız M. Relationship between health literacy, health fatalism and attitudes towards cancer screenings: latent profile analysis. BMC Public Health 2025;25(1) View
  6. Ma Q, Tham J, Bidin R, Syed Zainudin S. Understanding cancer information-scanning behavior on WeChat among young Chinese adults: Applying a modified comprehensive model of information seeking. DIGITAL HEALTH 2025;11 View
  7. Zheng Y, Wang J, Zhu Y, Zhao X. Effect of E-Health Use on Cancer Screening Mediated Through Cancer Worry and Fatalism: A Cross-Sectional Study of Older Adults. Cancer Control 2025;32 View
  8. Dang Q, Lin W, Li Y. Information and authority: research on the mechanism of offspring's health information avoidance behavior. Frontiers in Public Health 2025;13 View
  9. Ramiah D, Ngcezu S, Ayeni O, Achilonu O, Adeleke M, Nair T, Otten J, Mmereki D. Implementing Remote Radiotherapy Planning to Increase Patient Flow at a Johannesburg Academic Hospital, South Africa: Protocol for a Prospective Feasibility Study. JMIR Research Protocols 2025;14:e60131 View
  10. 张 倩. Research Progress on Cancer Fatalism in Cervical Cancer Patients. Advances in Clinical Medicine 2025;15(07):1610 View
  11. Li J, Tan L. How Information-Seeking Reduces Cancer Fatalism: A Comparison of the Mediating Role of Risk Perception in Young and Older Adults. Journal of Cancer Education 2025 View