Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London, UK.
School of Sociology, Politics, and International Studies, University of Bristol, UK.
Vaccine. 2021 Apr 28;39(18):2595-2603. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.02.054. Epub 2021 Mar 16.
There is existing evidence of a relationship between media use and vaccine hesitancy. Four online questionnaires were completed by general population samples from the US and the UK in June 2020 (N = 1198, N = 3890, N = 1663, N = 2237). After controls, all four studies found a positive association between intention to be vaccinated and usage of broadcast and print media. The three studies which operationalised media usage in terms of frequency found no effect for social media. However, the study which operationalised media use in terms of informational reliance found a negative effect for social media. Youth, low household income, female gender, below degree-level of education, and membership of other than white ethnic groups were each also found to be associated with lower intentions to be vaccinated in at least two of the four studies. In all four studies, intention to be vaccinated was positively associated with having voted either for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 US presidential elections or for Labour Party candidates in the 2019 UK general election. Neither of the UK studies found an association with having voted for Conservative Party candidates, but both US studies found a negative association between intention to be vaccinated and having voted for Donald Trump. The consistent finding of greater intention to be vaccinated among users of legacy media but not among users of social media suggests that social media do not currently provide an adequate replacement for legacy media, at least in terms of public health communication. The finding of a negative association with social media in the study which measured informational reliance rather than frequency is consistent with the view that uncritical consumption of social media may be acting to promote vaccine hesitancy.
有证据表明媒体使用与疫苗犹豫之间存在关联。2020 年 6 月,来自美国和英国的普通人群样本分别完成了四项在线问卷调查(N=1198、N=3890、N=1663、N=2237)。经过控制后,四项研究均发现接种意愿与广播和印刷媒体的使用呈正相关。其中三项研究根据使用频率对媒体使用进行了操作化,没有发现社交媒体的影响。然而,将媒体使用操作化为信息依赖程度的研究发现,社交媒体对疫苗接种意愿有负面影响。在至少四项研究中的两项中,还发现年轻人、低收入家庭、女性、未达到学位水平的教育程度以及不属于白人种族群体,这些因素与较低的疫苗接种意愿有关。在所有四项研究中,接种意愿与 2016 年美国总统选举中投票给希拉里·克林顿或 2019 年英国大选中投票给工党候选人呈正相关。英国的两项研究均未发现与投票给保守党候选人有关,但美国的两项研究均发现,接种意愿与投票给唐纳德·特朗普之间呈负相关。传统媒体使用者接种意愿更高,而社交媒体使用者接种意愿较低的一致发现表明,社交媒体目前至少在公共卫生传播方面,还不能替代传统媒体。在衡量信息依赖程度而不是使用频率的研究中,发现与社交媒体呈负相关的结果与以下观点一致,即对社交媒体不加批判地消费可能会助长疫苗犹豫情绪。