Pro-Vaccination Flu and COVID-19 Messages: Evidence of Congenial Targeted and Spillover Effects

COVID Pub Date : 2024-03-11 DOI:10.3390/covid4030024
J. Dillard, Lijiang Shen
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Abstract

Given the plentitude of messages in the public arena that promote vaccination against different diseases or raise the possibility of vaccine mandates, we asked whether message effects in one disease domain might spill over into other domains. Our experiment exposed individuals (N = 1755) recruited from an opt-in online panel (Qualtrics) on influenza or COVID-19 pro-vaccination messages then measured intentions to vaccinate for each disease and intentions to support a vaccine mandate for each disease. Messages that targeted flu (vs. COVID-19) exhibited stronger effects on intentions to vaccinate for corresponding (vs. noncorresponding) disease. We observed positive spillover from intention to vaccinate against one disease to intention to vaccinate against the other disease, as well as from vaccination intention type to support for corresponding and noncorresponding vaccine mandates. Although pro-vaccination flu and COVID-19 messages have multiple effects, those effects are congenial. The results adjudicate differences in spillover theory and suggest synergistic effects between pro-vaccination campaigns.
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支持接种流感疫苗和 COVID-19 的信息:同源性目标效应和溢出效应的证据
鉴于公共领域中存在大量针对不同疾病的疫苗接种宣传或提出疫苗强制接种可能性的信息,我们提出了这样一个问题:一种疾病领域的信息效应是否会蔓延到其他领域。我们的实验让从选择加入的在线小组(Qualtrics)中招募的个人(N = 1755)接触流感或 COVID-19 疫苗接种宣传信息,然后测量他们对每种疾病的疫苗接种意向以及对每种疾病的疫苗接种授权的支持意向。针对流感(vs. COVID-19)的信息对相应疾病(vs. 非相应疾病)疫苗接种意愿的影响更大。我们观察到从一种疾病的疫苗接种意向到另一种疾病的疫苗接种意向的正溢出效应,以及从疫苗接种意向类型到对相应和非相应疫苗接种授权的支持的正溢出效应。尽管支持接种流感疫苗和 COVID-19 的信息具有多重效应,但这些效应是同源的。研究结果修正了溢出理论的分歧,并表明支持疫苗接种活动之间存在协同效应。
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