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SAGE Publications, Journal of Health Psychology, 6(23), p. 765-775, 2016

DOI: 10.1177/1359105316650511

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A pilot randomised test of a self-affirmation implementation intention intervention to reduce dietary salt intake

Journal article published in 2016 by Daisy Bradbury, Rebecca Upsher, Joseph Chilcot ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Self-affirmation may reduce defensive processing towards health messages. We tested the effects of a self-affirmation implementation intentional intervention with regard to salt risk message acceptance, estimates of daily-recommended intake and self-reported intake. Participants ( n = 65) who consumed over 6 g/day of salt were randomised into three conditions: self-affirmation, self-affirming implementation intention and control. Participants attended the laboratory and completed a 2-week follow-up. There was no effect of the condition on message acceptance, salt estimation and 2-week salt intake. Across conditions, 2-week salt intake was reduced. We found no evidence for either intervention with regard to salt risk message acceptance and behaviour change.