The Stan Richards School of Advertising & Public Relations, The University of Texas at Austin.
Department of Communication Arts, The University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Health Commun. 2024 Aug;39(9):1833-1846. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2023.2244169. Epub 2023 Aug 8.
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought unprecedented challenges to healthcare and public health messaging in the United States. One area of focus has been vaccination uptake among Black Americans, who have experienced COVID-19 deaths disproportionate to their share of the United States population, raising questions about the processes involved in vaccination perceptions and behaviors. Guided by the Risk Information Seeking and Processing model, this study explored the roles of medical mistrust and social media as a source of risk information in Black Americans' vaccine hesitancy. Survey results from a YouGov panel sample of Black Americans ( = 1,136; 53.5% female) showed that social media use and medical mistrust were positively associated with belief in misinformation related to the COVID-19 vaccine, which, in turn, was positively related to vaccine hesitancy through perceived information insufficiency and information seeking intentions. Furthermore, we found that belief in misinformation and subjective norms toward anti-vaccination also serially mediated the association between social media use and medical mistrust with vaccine hesitancy. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
新冠疫情给美国的医疗保健和公共卫生信息传播带来了前所未有的挑战。关注的一个领域是美国黑人的疫苗接种率,他们因新冠疫情而死亡的比例与他们在美国人口中的比例不成比例,这引发了人们对疫苗接种认知和行为背后过程的质疑。本研究以风险信息寻求和处理模型为指导,探讨了医疗不信任和社交媒体作为黑人美国人疫苗犹豫的风险信息来源的作用。对 YouGov 小组中黑人美国人样本(n=1136;53.5%为女性)的调查结果显示,社交媒体的使用和对医疗的不信任与对与新冠疫苗相关的错误信息的信任呈正相关,而这种信任又通过感知信息不足和信息寻求意愿与疫苗犹豫呈正相关。此外,我们发现,对错误信息的信任和对反疫苗接种的主观规范也在社交媒体使用与医疗不信任与疫苗犹豫之间的关联中起到了串联中介作用。讨论了理论和实践意义。