COVID-19 Vaccination and Public Health Communication Strategies: An In-depth Look at How Demographics, Political Ideology, and News/Information Source Preference Matter

被引:1
|
作者
Nowak, Glen J. [1 ]
Cacciatore, Michael A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Georgia, Grady Coll Journalism & Mass Commun, Grady Ctr Hlth & Risk Commun, Athens, GA 30602 USA
关键词
GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE; UNITED-STATES; HESITANCY; PERCEPTIONS; VACCINES; TRUST;
D O I
10.1080/1553118X.2022.2039666
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
Widely accepted public health actions and recommendations, particularly those related to vaccines, are critical to U.S. and global responses to infectious disease pandemics, such as COVID-19. For vaccination-related efforts like those involving COVID-19 vaccines, high national compliance is needed. While initial COVID-19 vaccination uptake in the U.S. has been quite high, it quickly became apparent that demographic characteristics, political ideology, and potentially news/information sources used were associated with COVID-19 vaccination acceptance, hesitancy, and resistance. Drawing from nationally published COVID-19 public opinion polls as well as social and behavioral science related to vaccination acceptance, this study used a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults 18 years-old and older, undertaken in November-December 2020, to examine how four key demographic characteristics (sex, age, race/ethnicity, education), political ideology (liberal, moderate, conservative), and news/information source preference (liberal, conservative, balanced) were related to COVID-19 vaccination intentions, COVID-19 risk-benefit perceptions, interest and attention to COVID-19 information, self-reported level of being informed on key COVID-19 items, and trust and use of common COVID-19 information sources. Multiple associations were found, with most having important implications for strategic communication efforts related to COVID-19 vaccination and other preventive health recommendations.
引用
收藏
页码:516 / 538
页数:23
相关论文
共 5 条
  • [1] Partisan public health: how does political ideology influence support for COVID-19 related misinformation?
    Nicholas Francis Havey
    Journal of Computational Social Science, 2020, 3 : 319 - 342
  • [2] Partisan public health: how does political ideology influence support for COVID-19 related misinformation?
    Havey, Nicholas Francis
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL SOCIAL SCIENCE, 2020, 3 (02): : 319 - 342
  • [3] 'Communication, that is the key': a qualitative investigation of how essential workers with COVID-19 responded to public health information
    Roe, Mark
    Buggy, Conor
    Ingram, Carolyn
    Codd, Mary
    Buckley, Claire
    Archibald, Mary
    Rachwal, Natalie
    Downey, Vicky
    Chen, Yanbing
    Sripaiboonkij, Penpatra
    Drummond, Anne
    Alvarez, Elizabeth
    Perrotta, Carla
    BMJ OPEN, 2022, 12 (07):
  • [4] Communication Strategies to Promote COVID-19 Vaccination Intention: How Effective are Source, Appeal, Framing, and Evidence Type Approaches?
    Limbu, Yam B.
    McKinley, Christopher
    HEALTH COMMUNICATION, 2025, 40 (03) : 429 - 444
  • [5] The Reliability and Quality of YouTube Videos as a Source of Public Health Information Regarding COVID-19 Vaccination: Cross-sectional Study
    Chan, Calvin
    Sounderajah, Viknesh
    Daniels, Elisabeth
    Acharya, Amish
    Clarke, Jonathan
    Yalamanchili, Seema
    Normahani, Pasha
    Markar, Sheraz
    Ashrafian, Hutan
    Darzi, Ara
    JMIR PUBLIC HEALTH AND SURVEILLANCE, 2021, 7 (07):