Centre for Social Sciences, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Centre of Excellence, Budapest, Hungary.
J Behav Med. 2023 Apr;46(1-2):185-200. doi: 10.1007/s10865-022-00314-5. Epub 2022 May 14.
This research explores the determinants of vaccine hesitancy during the third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Hungary. This article utilizes data from in-person public opinion research conducted in Hungary (March 2021, N = 1000). Government supporters, older people (60 +) and COVID-19 survivors were more likely to accept vaccination, but these variables lose significance, once controlling for personal fears and pandemic-related attitudes. COVID-19 related fears and precautious behavior reduce, while general level of fears increase the probability of vaccine hesitancy. Fear from partner's aggression and higher levels of financial security negatively correlate with vaccine hesitancy. Our study separately analyzes the effect of various pandemic-related conspiratorial beliefs on vaccine hesitancy. All analyzed false beliefs have a significant positive effect on vaccine hesitancy, but the strongest predictors are vaccine-related conspiracy theories ("microchip" and "population control" theories) and virus denial.
这项研究探讨了匈牙利 COVID-19 大流行第三波期间疫苗犹豫的决定因素。本文利用了 2021 年 3 月在匈牙利进行的实地公众意见调查的数据(N=1000)。政府支持者、老年人(60 岁以上)和 COVID-19 幸存者更有可能接受疫苗接种,但这些变量在控制个人恐惧和与大流行相关的态度后失去了意义。与 COVID-19 相关的恐惧和谨慎行为减少,而一般恐惧水平则增加了疫苗犹豫的可能性。来自伴侣的攻击性恐惧和更高的财务安全性与疫苗犹豫呈负相关。我们的研究分别分析了各种与大流行相关的阴谋论信念对疫苗犹豫的影响。所有分析的虚假信念对疫苗犹豫都有显著的正向影响,但最强的预测因素是疫苗相关的阴谋论(“微芯片”和“人口控制”理论)和病毒否认。