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Health Information Sources and the Influenza Vaccination: The Mediating Roles of Perceived Vaccine Efficacy and Safety

Juwon Hwang

2020Journal of Health Communication82 citationsDOI

Abstract

= 19,420), mediation analyses were conducted. Results revealed that considering vaccine efficacy, health information seekers who assigned more value to medical professionals, medical journals, and newspaper articles were more likely to perceive a vaccine as effective, thus being more likely to receive the influenza vaccine. By contrast, individuals who placed more value in social media were less likely to perceive vaccine efficacy, and, in turn, were less likely to get the influenza vaccine. Turning to vaccine safety, the value ascribed to medical professionals was positively associated with vaccine safety, which, in turn, related to influenza vaccine uptake. By contrast, social media, family or friends, and promotions were negatively associated with vaccine safety, and then influenza vaccine uptake.

Topics & Concepts

Influenza vaccineVaccinationMedicineVaccine efficacyMediationInfluenza seasonRisk perceptionImmunologyEnvironmental healthFamily medicinePerceptionPsychologyLawPolitical scienceNeuroscienceInfluenza Virus Research StudiesVaccine Coverage and HesitancyMisinformation and Its Impacts
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