Patience Predicts Attitudes Toward Vaccination and Uptake of Vaccines

IF 4.3 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Social Psychological and Personality Science Pub Date : 2023-09-02 DOI:10.1177/19485506231189905
H. F. Chan, Stephanie M. Rizio, Ahmed Skali, B. Torgler
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Abstract

Vaccination is a pressing public health issue. We hypothesize that impatience (discounting future benefits of current actions) leads to lower vaccination rates and worse attitudes toward vaccines. In preregistered individual-level Study 1 ( N = 2,614), we document a positive and quantitatively small association (standardized coefficient = 0.06) between patience and attitudes toward vaccines. In Study 2 ( N = 76), national-level patience accounts for 21% of the global variation in COVID-19 vaccinations; patience’s effect is small-to-moderate (standardized coefficient = 0.19). In duration models (Study 3; 4,180 ≤ N≤ 9,973), more patient countries more quickly reach high COVID-19 vaccination thresholds. The results generalize beyond COVID-19: Patience among European subnational regions predicts better attitudes toward vaccination against the 2009 swine influenza (Study 4: Nregions = 138; Ncountries = 17). Finally (Study 5, N = 75), our results are not specific to pandemics: National patience explains the global variation in infant vaccinations.
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耐心预测对疫苗接种的态度和疫苗的吸收
疫苗接种是一个紧迫的公共卫生问题。我们假设,缺乏耐心(贴现当前行动的未来利益)导致疫苗接种率降低和对疫苗的态度恶化。在预登记的个体水平研究1 (N = 2,614)中,我们记录了耐心和对疫苗态度之间的正相关和定量小关联(标准化系数= 0.06)。在研究2 (N = 76)中,国家层面的耐心占全球COVID-19疫苗接种变化的21%;耐心的影响从小到中等(标准化系数= 0.19)。在持续时间模型(研究3;4180≤N≤9973),更多患者国家更快达到COVID-19疫苗接种的高阈值。结果可以推广到COVID-19之外:欧洲次国家区域的耐心预测对2009年猪流感疫苗接种的态度更好(研究4:Nregions = 138;Ncountries = 17)。最后(研究5,N = 75),我们的结果并不局限于流行病:国家耐心解释了婴儿疫苗接种的全球差异。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
12.50
自引率
1.80%
发文量
77
期刊介绍: Social Psychological and Personality Science (SPPS) is a distinctive journal in the fields of social and personality psychology that focuses on publishing brief empirical study reports, typically limited to 5000 words. The journal's mission is to disseminate research that significantly contributes to the advancement of social psychological and personality science. It welcomes submissions that introduce new theories, present empirical data, propose innovative methods, or offer a combination of these elements. SPPS also places a high value on replication studies, giving them serious consideration regardless of whether they confirm or challenge the original findings, with a particular emphasis on replications of studies initially published in SPPS. The journal is committed to a rapid review and publication process, ensuring that research can swiftly enter the scientific discourse and become an integral part of ongoing academic conversations.
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