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恐惧却被误导:阴谋论信念抵消了对新冠病毒的恐惧对疫苗接种意愿的积极影响——来自罗马尼亚样本的研究结果

Afraid but misinformed: Conspiracist beliefs cancel the positive influence of fear of COVID-19 on vaccination intentions - Findings from a Romanian sample.

作者信息

Holman Andrei C, Popușoi Simona A

机构信息

Department of Psychology, Faculty of Psychology and Education Sciences, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iași, Iași, Romania.

出版信息

Front Psychol. 2023 Apr 20;14:1109064. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1109064. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Understanding the factors that make people more likely to refuse vaccination against COVID-19 is crucial in order to design public health messages efficient in increasing vaccination rates. As COVID-19 creates risks of seriously damaging health effects, fear of this disease is as a significant determinant of vaccination intentions, as indicated by past research. Nevertheless, this positive influence may be limited in people who do not consider vaccines as a solution to protect against COVID-19, especially those who hold conspiracist beliefs about the new coronavirus and, implicitly, about the newly developed vaccines. The present study examined in a cross-sectional design on a convenience sample ( = 564) the joint effect of fear of COVID-19 and conspiracist beliefs on vaccination intentions, advancing past research on their independent influences. Furthermore, we investigated and controlled the effects of perceived risk of catching COVID-19, trust in medical experts, attitude towards vaccination and socio-demographical characteristics (i.e., gender, age, and education), previously found to be associated to COVID-19 vaccination intentions. We also tested the effect of ambivalence towards vaccination, i.e., the degree to which people simultaneously hold positive and negative evaluations of this intervention, as the widespread misinformation on the new coronavirus and its vaccines may induce ambivalence on this latter issue in many people. The results showed that the positive effect of fear of COVID-19 on vaccination intentions emerged only in participants who tend not to endorse conspiracist ideas on the new coronavirus. Moreover, higher vaccine hesitancy was found in participants with higher ambivalence towards vaccination, in those who perceive the risk of being contaminated by the new coronavirus as low, and in those with more negative attitudes towards vaccines in general. Vaccine ambivalence also emerged as a mediator of the negative effects of conspiracist beliefs about COVID-19 on vaccination intentions. This pattern of findings suggests the public messages emphasizing the risks of COVID-19 should also combat misinformation in order to maximize vaccine uptake.

摘要

了解促使人们更有可能拒绝接种新冠疫苗的因素对于设计能有效提高疫苗接种率的公共卫生信息至关重要。正如过去的研究所表明的,由于新冠病毒会带来严重损害健康的风险,对这种疾病的恐惧是疫苗接种意愿的一个重要决定因素。然而,对于那些不认为疫苗是预防新冠病毒的解决办法的人,尤其是那些对新冠病毒以及隐含地对新研发的疫苗持有阴谋论观点的人,这种积极影响可能会受到限制。本研究采用横断面设计,以便利样本(n = 564)检验了对新冠病毒的恐惧和阴谋论信念对疫苗接种意愿的联合影响,推进了以往关于它们独立影响的研究。此外,我们调查并控制了感染新冠病毒的感知风险、对医学专家的信任、对疫苗接种的态度以及社会人口学特征(即性别、年龄和教育程度)的影响,先前发现这些因素与新冠疫苗接种意愿相关。我们还测试了对疫苗接种的矛盾态度的影响,即人们对这种干预措施同时持有积极和消极评价的程度,因为关于新冠病毒及其疫苗的广泛错误信息可能会在许多人当中引发对这一问题的矛盾态度。结果表明,对新冠病毒的恐惧对疫苗接种意愿的积极影响仅在那些不太赞同关于新冠病毒的阴谋论观点的参与者中出现。此外,在对疫苗接种矛盾态度较高的参与者、那些认为感染新冠病毒风险较低的参与者以及总体上对疫苗态度更消极的参与者中,发现了更高的疫苗犹豫程度。疫苗矛盾态度也成为关于新冠病毒的阴谋论信念对疫苗接种意愿产生负面影响的一个中介因素。这种研究结果模式表明,强调新冠病毒风险的公共信息也应该打击错误信息,以便最大限度地提高疫苗接种率。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/033b/10158732/077e7f997bef/fpsyg-14-1109064-g001.jpg

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