![The Roles of Information Valence, Media Literacy and Perceived Information Quality on the Association Between Frequent Social Media Exposure and COVID-19 Vaccination Intention](./styles/zen/images/no_image.jpg)
Titre : | The Roles of Information Valence, Media Literacy and Perceived Information Quality on the Association Between Frequent Social Media Exposure and COVID-19 Vaccination Intention (2023) |
Auteurs : | Meiqi Xin, Auteur ; Sitong Luo, Auteur ; Suhua Wang, Auteur ; Junfeng Zhao, Auteur |
Type de document : | Article : texte imprimé |
Dans : | American Journal of Health Promotion (Vol. 37, n°2, February 2023) |
Article en page(s) : | pp. 189–199 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : | |
Résumé : |
"Purpose
This study aimed to examine the associations between frequent exposure to positive/negative information about vaccine efficacy/safety on social media and intention of COVID-19 vaccination, and to test if media literacy and perceived information quality would moderate such associations. Design A multi-city cross-sectional survey. Setting At five universities in different regions of China. Subjects 6922 university students (a response rate of 72.3%). Measures frequency of exposure to social media information about COVID-19 vaccination, media literacy, perceived information quality, intention of COVID-19 vaccination, and sociodemographic characteristics. Analysis Logistic regression analysis was conducted to test main and interaction effects. Results Higher exposure to positive information about vaccine efficacy (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.30, P < .001) and vaccine safety (AOR = 1.27, P < .001) were positively associated with vaccination intention. No significant associations were shown between exposure to negative information about vaccine efficacy/safety and vaccination intention. Higher net exposure to negative vs positive information was negatively associated with vaccination intention (AOR = .82, P < .001). High media literacy was further found to attenuate the effect of negative information exposure and strengthen that of positive information exposure. Perceived information quality was not a significant moderator. Conclusion The valence of social media information regarding the efficacy and safety of COVID-19 vaccines and individuals’ media literacy jointly shaped COVID-19 vaccination intention. The findings can inform the development of effective health promotion strategies for enhancing COVID-19 vaccination." |
Catalogueur : | RESOdoc |
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Cote | Code-barres | Support | Localisation | Disponibilité |
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RESO A.19 | RE65682462 | Bulletin | RESOdoc | Consultation sur place Disponible |