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
  12. Hsiao C, Lee H. Personal cancer worry and Systemic Cancer Concern: Pathways to health behaviors via social media and emotional well-being. Computers in Human Behavior 2026;178:108918 View