缺乏信任、阴谋论信念和社交媒体使用可预测新冠疫苗犹豫情况。

Lack of Trust, Conspiracy Beliefs, and Social Media Use Predict COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy.

作者信息

Jennings Will, Stoker Gerry, Bunting Hannah, Valgarðsson Viktor Orri, Gaskell Jennifer, Devine Daniel, McKay Lawrence, Mills Melinda C

机构信息

School of Economic, Social and Political Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK.

St. Hilda's College, University of Oxford, Oxford OX4 1DY, UK.

出版信息

Vaccines (Basel). 2021 Jun 3;9(6):593. doi: 10.3390/vaccines9060593.

Abstract

As COVID-19 vaccines are rolled out across the world, there are growing concerns about the roles that trust, belief in conspiracy theories, and spread of misinformation through social media play in impacting vaccine hesitancy. We use a nationally representative survey of 1476 adults in the UK between 12 and 18 December 2020, along with 5 focus groups conducted during the same period. Trust is a core predictor, with distrust in vaccines in general and mistrust in government raising vaccine hesitancy. Trust in health institutions and experts and perceived personal threat are vital, with focus groups revealing that COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy is driven by a misunderstanding of herd immunity as providing protection, fear of rapid vaccine development and side effects, and beliefs that the virus is man-made and used for population control. In particular, those who obtain information from relatively unregulated social media sources-such as YouTube-that have recommendations tailored by watch history, and who hold general conspiratorial beliefs, are less willing to be vaccinated. Since an increasing number of individuals use social media for gathering health information, interventions require action from governments, health officials, and social media companies. More attention needs to be devoted to helping people understand their own risks, unpacking complex concepts, and filling knowledge voids.

摘要

随着新冠疫苗在全球范围内推广,人们越来越担心信任、对阴谋论的相信以及错误信息在社交媒体上的传播对疫苗犹豫情绪的影响。我们利用2020年12月12日至18日对英国1476名成年人进行的具有全国代表性的调查,以及同期开展的5个焦点小组。信任是一个核心预测因素,对疫苗总体不信任以及对政府不信任会增加疫苗犹豫情绪。对卫生机构和专家的信任以及感知到的个人威胁至关重要,焦点小组表明,新冠疫苗犹豫情绪是由对群体免疫提供保护的误解、对疫苗快速研发和副作用的恐惧,以及认为病毒是人造且用于人口控制的信念所驱动。特别是那些从相对不受监管的社交媒体来源(如YouTube)获取信息的人,这些来源会根据观看历史提供推荐,并且持有一般阴谋论信念,他们不太愿意接种疫苗。由于越来越多的人使用社交媒体获取健康信息,干预措施需要政府、卫生官员和社交媒体公司采取行动。需要更多关注帮助人们了解自身风险、剖析复杂概念以及填补知识空白。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/0f64/8226842/d4b67aa31563/vaccines-09-00593-g001.jpg

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