Suppr超能文献

社交沟通途径对 COVID-19 疫苗副作用预期和体验的影响。

Social communication pathways to COVID-19 vaccine side-effect expectations and experience.

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH 43606, United States of America.

School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052, Australia.

出版信息

J Psychosom Res. 2023 Jan;164:111081. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2022.111081. Epub 2022 Nov 10.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Negative beliefs about medication and vaccine side-effects can spread rapidly through social communication. This has been recently documented with the potential side-effects from the COVID-19 vaccines. We tested if pre-vaccination social communications about side-effects from personal acquaintances, news reports, and social media predict post-vaccination side-effect experiences. Further, as previous research suggests that side-effects can be exacerbated by negative expectations, we assessed if personal expectations mediate the relationships between social communication and side-effect experience.

METHOD

In a prospective longitudinal survey (N = 551), COVID-19 vaccine side-effect information from three sources-social media posts, news reports, and first-hand accounts from personal acquaintances-as well as side-effect expectations, were self-reported pre-vaccination. Vaccination side-effect experience was assessed post-vaccination.

RESULTS

In multivariate regression analyses, the number of pre-vaccination social media post views (β = 0.17) and impressions of severity conveyed from personal acquaintances (β = 0.42) significantly predicted an increase in pre-vaccination side-effect expectations, and the same variables (βs = 0.11, 0.14, respectively) predicted post-vaccination side-effect experiences. Moreover, pre-vaccination side-effect expectations mediated the relationship between both sources of social communication and experienced side-effects from a COVID-19 vaccination.

CONCLUSIONS

This study identifies links between personal acquaintance and social media communications and vaccine side-effect experiences and provides evidence that pre-vaccination expectations account for these relationships. The results suggest that modifying side-effect expectations through these channels may change the side-effects following a COVID-19 vaccination as well as other publicly discussed vaccinations and medications.

摘要

目的

对药物和疫苗副作用的负面信念可以通过社交传播迅速传播。最近,COVID-19 疫苗的潜在副作用就证明了这一点。我们测试了来自个人熟人、新闻报道和社交媒体的疫苗接种前关于副作用的社交交流是否预测接种疫苗后的副作用体验。此外,由于先前的研究表明副作用可能会因负面预期而加剧,我们评估了个人期望是否在社交交流和副作用体验之间的关系中起中介作用。

方法

在一项前瞻性纵向调查(N=551)中,COVID-19 疫苗副作用信息来自三个来源——社交媒体帖子、新闻报道和个人熟人的第一手报道,以及副作用预期,在接种疫苗前进行自我报告。接种疫苗后的副作用体验在接种疫苗后进行评估。

结果

在多变量回归分析中,接种疫苗前社交媒体帖子的浏览量(β=0.17)和熟人传达的严重程度印象(β=0.42)显著预测了接种疫苗前副作用预期的增加,并且相同的变量(βs=0.11,0.14,分别)预测了接种疫苗后的副作用体验。此外,接种疫苗前的副作用预期在社交交流来源和 COVID-19 疫苗接种后的副作用体验之间的关系中起中介作用。

结论

本研究确定了个人熟人社交和社交媒体交流与疫苗副作用体验之间的联系,并提供了证据表明接种疫苗前的期望可以解释这些关系。研究结果表明,通过这些渠道改变副作用期望可能会改变 COVID-19 疫苗接种以及其他公众讨论的疫苗和药物的副作用。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/279f/9646444/ed64e4aa7811/gr1_lrg.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验