| Titre : | Racial/Ethnic Differences in the Predictive Utility of Psychosocial Determinants of COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions (2023) |
| Auteurs : | Jace D. Pierce, Auteur ; Joahana Segundo, Auteur ; Jaye L. Derrick, Auteur |
| Type de document : | Article : texte imprimé |
| Dans : | American Journal of Health Promotion (Vol. 37 n°7, Septembre 2023) |
| Article en page(s) : | pp. 988–992 |
| Langues : | Anglais |
| Catégories : | |
| Résumé : |
"Purpose
To test whether the impact of subjective norms, race/ethnicity-specific descriptive norms, vaccine conspiracy beliefs, and prosocial concern on COVID-19 vaccination intentions differs by race/ethnicity for young adults. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting May-August 2021 in Texas. Subjects Racially/ethnically diverse unvaccinated college students (N = 314). Measures COVID-19 vaccination intentions, theory-driven constructs (eg, perceived susceptibility), vaccine conspiracy beliefs, prosocial concern, and social norms. Analysis Block-sequential multiple Tobit regression. Results Results revealed three significant two-way interactions between race/ethnicity and (1) subjective norms, F (5, 251) = 2.28, P Conclusion Although based on a relatively small sample, our findings suggest the importance of culturally tailoring COVID-19 vaccination messages to correct conspiracy beliefs, signaling a positive subjective norm, and enhancing prosocial concerns for specific racial-ethnic groups." |
| Catalogueur : | RESOdoc |
Exemplaires (1)
| Cote | Code-barres | Support | Localisation | Disponibilité |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RESO A.19 | RE65682612 | Bulletin | RESOdoc | Consultation sur place Disponible |

