Ioannis Kareklas, Devipsita Bhattacharya, Darrel D. Muehling, Victoria Kisekka
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Our work investigates the extent to which the politicization of health science may have impacted consumers' vaccine hesitancy during the COVID-19 pandemic. This inter-disciplinary, multi-method manuscript reports the results of three empirical investigations designed to examine how the consumers' political leanings and the sources they rely on for information might influence their decisions to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. We explore how radically opposing viewpoints regarding the pandemic may have eroded public trust in government institutions and health science during the months leading up to the 2020 U.S. presidential election. In addition, we examine how consumers with opposing political leanings may be differentially influenced by promotional messages that represent the two dominant contrasting viewpoints regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. Importantly, we find that low vaccine-hesitant Trump voters can be successfully targeted for pro-vaccination interventions using highly credible spokespeople, perceived to have high levels of expertise and trustworthiness.
期刊介绍:
The ISI impact score of Journal of Consumer Affairs now places it among the leading business journals and one of the top handful of marketing- related publications. The immediacy index score, showing how swiftly the published studies are cited or applied in other publications, places JCA seventh of those same 77 journals. More importantly, in these difficult economic times, JCA is the leading journal whose focus for over four decades has been on the interests of consumers in the marketplace. With the journal"s origins in the consumer movement and consumer protection concerns, the focus for papers in terms of both research questions and implications must involve the consumer"s interest and topics must be addressed from the consumers point of view.