1. Beliefs in COVID-19 Vaccine Misinformation Among Unvaccinated Black Americans: Prevalence, Socio-Psychological Predictors, and Consequences.
- Author
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Yuan Wang, Thier, Kathryn, Ntiri, Shana O., Quinn, Sandra Crouse, Adebamowo, Clement, and Xiaoli Nan
- Subjects
HEALTH attitudes ,AFRICAN Americans ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,HERD immunity ,VACCINATION ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,COVID-19 vaccines ,MISINFORMATION ,SOCIAL theory ,DECISION making ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SURVEYS ,RACISM ,INTENTION ,RELIGION ,PRACTICAL politics ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,FACTOR analysis ,DATA analysis software ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Health-related misinformation is a major threat to public health and particularly worrisome for populations experiencing health disparities. This study sets out to examine the prevalence, socio-psychological predictors, and consequences of beliefs in COVID-19 vaccine misinformation among unvaccinated Black Americans. We conducted an online national survey with Black Americans who had not been vaccinated against COVID-19 (N = 800) between February and March 2021. Results showed that beliefs in COVID-19 vaccine misinformation were prevalent among unvaccinated Black Americans with 13–19% of participants agreeing or strongly agreeing with various false claims about COVID-19 vaccines and 35–55% unsure about the veracity of these claims. Conservative ideology, conspiracy thinking mind-set, religiosity, and racial consciousness in health care settings predicted greater beliefs in COVID-19 vaccine misinformation, which were associated with lower vaccine confidence and acceptance. Theoretical and practical implications of the findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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