Pretražite po imenu i prezimenu autora, mentora, urednika, prevoditelja

Napredna pretraga

Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1250106

Intention to vaccinate against COVID-19 among young adults: The role of conspiratorial thinking


Hromatko, Ivana; Mikac, Una; Tadinac, Meri
Intention to vaccinate against COVID-19 among young adults: The role of conspiratorial thinking // Vaccines, 11 (2023), 2; 321, 12 doi:10.3390/vaccines11020321 (međunarodna recenzija, članak, znanstveni)


CROSBI ID: 1250106 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca

Naslov
Intention to vaccinate against COVID-19 among young adults: The role of conspiratorial thinking

Autori
Hromatko, Ivana ; Mikac, Una ; Tadinac, Meri

Izvornik
Vaccines (2076-393X) 11 (2023), 2; 321, 12

Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u časopisima, članak, znanstveni

Ključne riječi
vaccine hesitancy ; COVID-19 vaccine ; conspiratorial thinking ; young adults

Sažetak
The aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic brought a gain in the momentum of anti-scientific and anti-vaccine movements. Among factors contributing to the vaccine hesitancy, the ones related to the pseudoscientific beliefs and conspiratorial thinking provided a fruitful theoretical frame-work for exploring decision-making processes, including the vaccination-related ones. The aim of this study was to explore which variables best differentiated between groups of vaccinated (n=289), vaccine-hesitant (n=106) and vaccine-refusing (n=146) young adults. The study was con-ducted online and took place at the beginning of the mass vaccination campaign, when the vac-cine just became available for younger and non-vulnerable members of the general population. The demographic variables, COVID-19 anxiety, and conspiratorial thinking regarding COVID-19 were entered into the discriminant analysis. The function explaining 89.2% of the group differ-ences was mostly defined by conspiratorial thinking regarding COVID-19 (0.852), followed by variables with substantially less discriminative power, including the COVID-19 anxiety (0.423 ; lower in vaccine-refusing group), political orientation (0.486 ; vaccinated group leaning more to the left), financial and educational status (0.435 and 0.304 respectively ; both lower in the vac-cine-refusing group), religiosity (0.301 ; higher in the vaccine-refusing group). These results con-firm that among young adults, the decision to vaccinate against COVID-19 might be heavily in-fluenced by one’s proclivity to engage in conspiratorial thinking.

Izvorni jezik
Engleski

Znanstvena područja
Psihologija



POVEZANOST RADA


Ustanove:
Filozofski fakultet, Zagreb

Profili:

Avatar Url Una Mikac (autor)

Avatar Url Meri Tadinac (autor)

Avatar Url Ivana Hromatko (autor)

Poveznice na cjeloviti tekst rada:

doi www.mdpi.com

Citiraj ovu publikaciju:

Hromatko, Ivana; Mikac, Una; Tadinac, Meri
Intention to vaccinate against COVID-19 among young adults: The role of conspiratorial thinking // Vaccines, 11 (2023), 2; 321, 12 doi:10.3390/vaccines11020321 (međunarodna recenzija, članak, znanstveni)
Hromatko, I., Mikac, U. & Tadinac, M. (2023) Intention to vaccinate against COVID-19 among young adults: The role of conspiratorial thinking. Vaccines, 11 (2), 321, 12 doi:10.3390/vaccines11020321.
@article{article, author = {Hromatko, Ivana and Mikac, Una and Tadinac, Meri}, year = {2023}, pages = {12}, DOI = {10.3390/vaccines11020321}, chapter = {321}, keywords = {vaccine hesitancy, COVID-19 vaccine, conspiratorial thinking, young adults}, journal = {Vaccines}, doi = {10.3390/vaccines11020321}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, issn = {2076-393X}, title = {Intention to vaccinate against COVID-19 among young adults: The role of conspiratorial thinking}, keyword = {vaccine hesitancy, COVID-19 vaccine, conspiratorial thinking, young adults}, chapternumber = {321} }
@article{article, author = {Hromatko, Ivana and Mikac, Una and Tadinac, Meri}, year = {2023}, pages = {12}, DOI = {10.3390/vaccines11020321}, chapter = {321}, keywords = {vaccine hesitancy, COVID-19 vaccine, conspiratorial thinking, young adults}, journal = {Vaccines}, doi = {10.3390/vaccines11020321}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, issn = {2076-393X}, title = {Intention to vaccinate against COVID-19 among young adults: The role of conspiratorial thinking}, keyword = {vaccine hesitancy, COVID-19 vaccine, conspiratorial thinking, young adults}, chapternumber = {321} }

Časopis indeksira:


  • Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC)
    • Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXP)
    • Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
    • SCI-EXP, SSCI i/ili A&HCI
  • Scopus


Citati:





    Contrast
    Increase Font
    Decrease Font
    Dyslexic Font