Testing the Efficacy of Attitudinal Inoculation Videos to Enhance COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance: Quasi-Experimental Intervention Trial
JMIR Public Health and Surveillance2022Vol. 8(6), pp. e34615–e34615
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2022 papers
Rachael Piltch‐Loeb, Max Su, Brian Hughes, Marcia A. Testa, Beth Goldberg, Kurt Braddock, Cynthia Miller‐Idriss, Vanessa Maturo, Elena Savoia
Abstract
Across all intervention groups, inoculated individuals showed greater resistance to misinformation than their noninoculated counterparts. Relative to those who were not inoculated, inoculated participants showed significantly greater ability to recognize and identify rhetorical strategies used in misinformation, were less likely to share false information, and had greater willingness to get the COVID-19 vaccine. Attitudinal inoculation delivered through short video messages should be tested in public health messaging campaigns to counter mis- and disinformation.
Related Papers
- → Chilblain‐like lesions after BNT162b2 mRNA COVID‐19 vaccine: a case report suggesting that ‘COVID toes’ are due to the immune reaction to SARS‐CoV‐2(2021)26 cited
- → And now for something completely different: from 2019-nCoV and COVID-19 to 2020-nMan(2020)27 cited
- → ОПЫТ ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯ СЕРОПРЕВАЛЕНТНОСТИ К ВИРУСУ SARS-CoV-2 НАСЕЛЕНИЯ ИРКУТСКОЙ ОБЛАСТИ В ПЕРИОД ВСПЫШКИ COVID-19(2020)2 cited
- → Особенности сахароснижающей фармакотерапии у пациентов с SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19)(2021)