How Political Ideology and Media Shaped Vaccination Intention in the Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United States

COVID Pub Date : 2024-05-20 DOI:10.3390/covid4050045
Dilshani Sarathchandra, Jennifer Johnson-Leung
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Abstract

As a pharmaceutical intervention, vaccines remain a major public health strategy for mitigating the effects of COVID-19. Yet, vaccine intake has been affected by various cognitive and cultural factors. We examine how a selected set of factors (i.e., knowledge, concern, media, peer influence, and demographics) shaped COVID-19 vaccination intention in the early phase of the pandemic (Fall 2020). Using a survey conducted in three US states (Idaho, Texas, and Vermont) just prior to the rollout of the first vaccines against COVID-19, we find that COVID-19 concern was the primary driver of vaccination intention. Concern was shaped mainly by two factors: political ideology and media sources. Yet, ideology and media were much more important in affecting concern for those who leaned politically conservative, as opposed to those who leaned liberal or remained moderate. The results from our structural equation models affirm that the information politically conservative respondents were receiving reinforced the effects of their ideology, leading to a greater reduction in their concern. We discuss the potential implications of these findings for future pandemic preparedness.
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政治意识形态和媒体如何影响美国 COVID-19 大流行初期的疫苗接种意向
作为一种药物干预措施,疫苗仍然是减轻 COVID-19 影响的主要公共卫生策略。然而,疫苗摄入量受到各种认知和文化因素的影响。我们研究了在大流行的早期阶段(2020 年秋季),一组选定的因素(即知识、关注、媒体、同伴影响和人口统计学)是如何影响 COVID-19 疫苗接种意向的。通过在美国三个州(爱达荷州、德克萨斯州和佛蒙特州)进行的一项调查,我们发现,就在第一批 COVID-19 疫苗推出之前,COVID-19 关注是疫苗接种意向的主要驱动因素。关注度主要受两个因素的影响:政治意识形态和媒体来源。然而,意识形态和媒体对政治倾向保守者的关注度的影响要比倾向自由或温和者大得多。结构方程模型的结果证实,政治保守派受访者接收到的信息强化了他们意识形态的影响,从而导致他们的担忧程度进一步降低。我们将讨论这些发现对未来大流行病防备工作的潜在影响。
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