Cargando…

The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia

COVID-19 booster vaccinations have been recommended as a primary line of defence against serious illness and hospitalisation. This study identifies and characterises distinct profiles of attitudes towards vaccination, particularly the willingness to get a booster dose. A sample of 582 adults from Au...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kleitman, Sabina, Fullerton, Dayna J., Law, Marvin K. H., Blanchard, Matthew D., Campbell, Rachel, Tait, Margaret-Ann, Schulz, Jennifer, Lee, Jihyun, Stankov, Lazar, King, Madeleine T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10222735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37243011
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11050907
_version_ 1785049770662821888
author Kleitman, Sabina
Fullerton, Dayna J.
Law, Marvin K. H.
Blanchard, Matthew D.
Campbell, Rachel
Tait, Margaret-Ann
Schulz, Jennifer
Lee, Jihyun
Stankov, Lazar
King, Madeleine T.
author_facet Kleitman, Sabina
Fullerton, Dayna J.
Law, Marvin K. H.
Blanchard, Matthew D.
Campbell, Rachel
Tait, Margaret-Ann
Schulz, Jennifer
Lee, Jihyun
Stankov, Lazar
King, Madeleine T.
author_sort Kleitman, Sabina
collection PubMed
description COVID-19 booster vaccinations have been recommended as a primary line of defence against serious illness and hospitalisation. This study identifies and characterises distinct profiles of attitudes towards vaccination, particularly the willingness to get a booster dose. A sample of 582 adults from Australia completed an online survey capturing COVID-related behaviours, beliefs and attitudes and a range of sociodemographic, psychological, political, social and cultural variables. Latent Profile Analysis (LPA) identified three subgroups: Acceptant (61%), Hesitant (30%) and Resistant (9%). Compared to the Acceptant group, the Hesitant and Resistant groups were less worried about catching COVID-19, used fewer official COVID-19 information sources, checked the news less, were lower on the agreeableness personality dimension and reported more conservatism, persecutory thinking, amoral attitudes and need for chaos. The Hesitant group also reported checking the legitimacy of information sources less, scored lower on the openness to new experiences personality dimension and were more likely than the Resistant and Acceptant groups to report regaining freedoms (e.g., travel) and work requirements or external pressures as reasons to get a booster. The Resistant group were higher on reactance, held more conspiratorial beliefs and rated their culture as being less tolerant of deviance than the Hesitant and Acceptant groups. This research can inform tailored approaches to increasing booster uptake and optimal strategies for public health messaging.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10222735
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-102227352023-05-28 The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia Kleitman, Sabina Fullerton, Dayna J. Law, Marvin K. H. Blanchard, Matthew D. Campbell, Rachel Tait, Margaret-Ann Schulz, Jennifer Lee, Jihyun Stankov, Lazar King, Madeleine T. Vaccines (Basel) Article COVID-19 booster vaccinations have been recommended as a primary line of defence against serious illness and hospitalisation. This study identifies and characterises distinct profiles of attitudes towards vaccination, particularly the willingness to get a booster dose. A sample of 582 adults from Australia completed an online survey capturing COVID-related behaviours, beliefs and attitudes and a range of sociodemographic, psychological, political, social and cultural variables. Latent Profile Analysis (LPA) identified three subgroups: Acceptant (61%), Hesitant (30%) and Resistant (9%). Compared to the Acceptant group, the Hesitant and Resistant groups were less worried about catching COVID-19, used fewer official COVID-19 information sources, checked the news less, were lower on the agreeableness personality dimension and reported more conservatism, persecutory thinking, amoral attitudes and need for chaos. The Hesitant group also reported checking the legitimacy of information sources less, scored lower on the openness to new experiences personality dimension and were more likely than the Resistant and Acceptant groups to report regaining freedoms (e.g., travel) and work requirements or external pressures as reasons to get a booster. The Resistant group were higher on reactance, held more conspiratorial beliefs and rated their culture as being less tolerant of deviance than the Hesitant and Acceptant groups. This research can inform tailored approaches to increasing booster uptake and optimal strategies for public health messaging. MDPI 2023-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10222735/ /pubmed/37243011 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11050907 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kleitman, Sabina
Fullerton, Dayna J.
Law, Marvin K. H.
Blanchard, Matthew D.
Campbell, Rachel
Tait, Margaret-Ann
Schulz, Jennifer
Lee, Jihyun
Stankov, Lazar
King, Madeleine T.
The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia
title The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia
title_full The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia
title_fullStr The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia
title_full_unstemmed The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia
title_short The Psychology of COVID-19 Booster Hesitancy, Acceptance and Resistance in Australia
title_sort psychology of covid-19 booster hesitancy, acceptance and resistance in australia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10222735/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37243011
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11050907
work_keys_str_mv AT kleitmansabina thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT fullertondaynaj thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT lawmarvinkh thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT blanchardmatthewd thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT campbellrachel thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT taitmargaretann thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT schulzjennifer thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT leejihyun thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT stankovlazar thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT kingmadeleinet thepsychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT kleitmansabina psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT fullertondaynaj psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT lawmarvinkh psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT blanchardmatthewd psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT campbellrachel psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT taitmargaretann psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT schulzjennifer psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT leejihyun psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT stankovlazar psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia
AT kingmadeleinet psychologyofcovid19boosterhesitancyacceptanceandresistanceinaustralia