Psychological Factors of Vaccination Intent among Healthcare Providers, Parents, and Laypeople
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The interrelatedness of social-structural aspects and psychological features with vaccination intention provides the context to explore personal psychological features related to vaccination. Specifically, we focused on general decision making and vaccine-related dispositions, and their contribution to the intention to vaccinate, within post-pandemic circumstances, after the imposed possibility of choosing a vaccine brand. Our study aimed to map the function (promotive, protective, risk, vulnerability) of a set of personal psychological aspects in the intention to vaccinate among people holding different social roles regarding the vaccination. We surveyed three samples of people: healthcare providers (HPs), parents, and laypeople, within the post-pandemic context. Negative vaccine attitudes lower intention to vaccinate in all regression models (all βs ranging from −0.128 to −0.983, all ps < 0.01). The main results indicate that, regardless of the sample/social role, there is a shared a...ttitudinal core for positive vaccination intention. This core consists of [high] trust in large corporations, government, and healthcare systems, as well as perceived consensus on vaccine safety/efficacy and experience of freedom (protective factors), and [low] vaccination conspiracy beliefs, trust in social media, and choice overload (risk and vulnerability factors, respectively). There are no common promotive factors of intention to vaccinate: for parents, perceived consensus on vaccines, and trust in corporations and the healthcare system, play such roles; for HPs, the experience of freedom is obtained as a unique promotive factor. In contrast, for laypeople, no unique promotive factors were found. Our findings provide insights into the function of psychological factors of vaccination intention across different social roles, particularly healthcare providers, parents, and laypeople, and emphasize the need for tailored immunization interventions in the post-pandemic landscape.
Кључне речи:
vaccination intention / healthcare providers / parents / laypeople / promotive factors / protective factors / risk factors / vulnerability factors / vaccine decision making / vaccination behaviorИзвор:
Vaccines, 2023, 11, 12, 1816-Издавач:
- MDPI
Финансирање / пројекти:
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia, contract number: 451-03-47/2023-01/200163
- Research grant from Investigator-Initated Studies Program of Merck Sharpe & Dohme doo (grant number #100867)
Институција/група
Psihologija / PsychologyTY - JOUR AU - Damnjanović, Kaja AU - Ilić, Sandra AU - Kušić, Marija AU - Lazić, Milica AU - Popović, Dragoslav PY - 2023 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5585 AB - The interrelatedness of social-structural aspects and psychological features with vaccination intention provides the context to explore personal psychological features related to vaccination. Specifically, we focused on general decision making and vaccine-related dispositions, and their contribution to the intention to vaccinate, within post-pandemic circumstances, after the imposed possibility of choosing a vaccine brand. Our study aimed to map the function (promotive, protective, risk, vulnerability) of a set of personal psychological aspects in the intention to vaccinate among people holding different social roles regarding the vaccination. We surveyed three samples of people: healthcare providers (HPs), parents, and laypeople, within the post-pandemic context. Negative vaccine attitudes lower intention to vaccinate in all regression models (all βs ranging from −0.128 to −0.983, all ps < 0.01). The main results indicate that, regardless of the sample/social role, there is a shared attitudinal core for positive vaccination intention. This core consists of [high] trust in large corporations, government, and healthcare systems, as well as perceived consensus on vaccine safety/efficacy and experience of freedom (protective factors), and [low] vaccination conspiracy beliefs, trust in social media, and choice overload (risk and vulnerability factors, respectively). There are no common promotive factors of intention to vaccinate: for parents, perceived consensus on vaccines, and trust in corporations and the healthcare system, play such roles; for HPs, the experience of freedom is obtained as a unique promotive factor. In contrast, for laypeople, no unique promotive factors were found. Our findings provide insights into the function of psychological factors of vaccination intention across different social roles, particularly healthcare providers, parents, and laypeople, and emphasize the need for tailored immunization interventions in the post-pandemic landscape. PB - MDPI T2 - Vaccines T1 - Psychological Factors of Vaccination Intent among Healthcare Providers, Parents, and Laypeople IS - 12 SP - 1816 VL - 11 DO - https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11121816 ER -
@article{ author = "Damnjanović, Kaja and Ilić, Sandra and Kušić, Marija and Lazić, Milica and Popović, Dragoslav", year = "2023", abstract = "The interrelatedness of social-structural aspects and psychological features with vaccination intention provides the context to explore personal psychological features related to vaccination. Specifically, we focused on general decision making and vaccine-related dispositions, and their contribution to the intention to vaccinate, within post-pandemic circumstances, after the imposed possibility of choosing a vaccine brand. Our study aimed to map the function (promotive, protective, risk, vulnerability) of a set of personal psychological aspects in the intention to vaccinate among people holding different social roles regarding the vaccination. We surveyed three samples of people: healthcare providers (HPs), parents, and laypeople, within the post-pandemic context. Negative vaccine attitudes lower intention to vaccinate in all regression models (all βs ranging from −0.128 to −0.983, all ps < 0.01). The main results indicate that, regardless of the sample/social role, there is a shared attitudinal core for positive vaccination intention. This core consists of [high] trust in large corporations, government, and healthcare systems, as well as perceived consensus on vaccine safety/efficacy and experience of freedom (protective factors), and [low] vaccination conspiracy beliefs, trust in social media, and choice overload (risk and vulnerability factors, respectively). There are no common promotive factors of intention to vaccinate: for parents, perceived consensus on vaccines, and trust in corporations and the healthcare system, play such roles; for HPs, the experience of freedom is obtained as a unique promotive factor. In contrast, for laypeople, no unique promotive factors were found. Our findings provide insights into the function of psychological factors of vaccination intention across different social roles, particularly healthcare providers, parents, and laypeople, and emphasize the need for tailored immunization interventions in the post-pandemic landscape.", publisher = "MDPI", journal = "Vaccines", title = "Psychological Factors of Vaccination Intent among Healthcare Providers, Parents, and Laypeople", number = "12", pages = "1816", volume = "11", doi = "https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11121816" }
Damnjanović, K., Ilić, S., Kušić, M., Lazić, M.,& Popović, D.. (2023). Psychological Factors of Vaccination Intent among Healthcare Providers, Parents, and Laypeople. in Vaccines MDPI., 11(12), 1816. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11121816
Damnjanović K, Ilić S, Kušić M, Lazić M, Popović D. Psychological Factors of Vaccination Intent among Healthcare Providers, Parents, and Laypeople. in Vaccines. 2023;11(12):1816. doi:https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11121816 .
Damnjanović, Kaja, Ilić, Sandra, Kušić, Marija, Lazić, Milica, Popović, Dragoslav, "Psychological Factors of Vaccination Intent among Healthcare Providers, Parents, and Laypeople" in Vaccines, 11, no. 12 (2023):1816, https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11121816 . .
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