Swine influenza (H1N1) pandemic has received extensive media coverage of this year. The World Health Organization and provide regular updates on cases of infection and the death toll, hyper vigilance recommended daily hygiene, like washing hands frequently or sneeze into the crook of his arms. News reports at all levels, since the closure of local schools, airports and testing of the global disease surveillance, constantly reminding us of the high risks.
In times of great health concern, such as sneezing everyday behavior can serve to remind us of the hands or the use of vitamins wash. But what if we respond daily coughing and sneezing and sniffling? These signals can transform the sound discretion in an irrational fear of germs and more?
The new study, published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, University of Michigan psychologist, Spike Lee and Norbert Schwarz, examined whether an increased perception could ignore the risks of pandemic flu, the fear of other risks that are not interconnected.
To test this, researchers stationed an experimenter in occupied campus buildings, and instructed the students passed strong sneeze. Then the researchers administered a survey to some of the students asking their perceived risk of an "average American" a serious disease, heart attack 50 years ago, or the state for a crime or an accident.
Researchers have found that he had seen someone sneeze, provides a higher likelihood of becoming ill. In addition, reported an increased fear of dying of a heart attack before the age of 50 years died in an accident or the result of a crime. The researchers suspect that the public has started to sneeze area allhealth fear threats, even those that are not connected to germinate.
The researchers then asked the same people for their opinions on the system of the country in health care. The actor within earshot of sneezing more negative health care in
This result was so surprising that psychologists ran another version of the sneeze hypothesis in a mall. This time, the interviewer sneezing and coughing, while conducting a survey on the priorities of the federal budget (i.e., should the government spend money for the production of vaccines or "green" jobs?). The participants were more federal spending to 1.3 billion U.S. dollars in the production of vaccines against influenza, instead of creating jobs to support green when the experimenter sneezing. Thus, pandemic influenza has the ability to change public sneezing, the political preferences of the other current priorities (i.e., "green jobs) for the production of vaccines against influenza," says Schwarz.



