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Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol

Background: Vaccine hesitancy is one of the greatest challenges to the success of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination campaigns. Videos promoting vaccines have a narrow scope focusing solely on facts, and less on the emotional and narrative elements of communication that can be equally p...

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Autores principales: Bhaktaram, Ananya, Ganjoo, Rohini, Jamison, Amelia M., Burleson, Julia, Pascual-Ferra, Paola, Alperstein, Neil, Barnett, Daniel J., Mohanty, Satyanarayan, Orton, Peter Z., Parida, Manoj, Kluegel, Eleanor, Rath, Sidharth, Rimal, Rajiv N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9652135/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36415882
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13628.2
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author Bhaktaram, Ananya
Ganjoo, Rohini
Jamison, Amelia M.
Burleson, Julia
Pascual-Ferra, Paola
Alperstein, Neil
Barnett, Daniel J.
Mohanty, Satyanarayan
Orton, Peter Z.
Parida, Manoj
Kluegel, Eleanor
Rath, Sidharth
Rimal, Rajiv N.
author_facet Bhaktaram, Ananya
Ganjoo, Rohini
Jamison, Amelia M.
Burleson, Julia
Pascual-Ferra, Paola
Alperstein, Neil
Barnett, Daniel J.
Mohanty, Satyanarayan
Orton, Peter Z.
Parida, Manoj
Kluegel, Eleanor
Rath, Sidharth
Rimal, Rajiv N.
author_sort Bhaktaram, Ananya
collection PubMed
description Background: Vaccine hesitancy is one of the greatest challenges to the success of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination campaigns. Videos promoting vaccines have a narrow scope focusing solely on facts, and less on the emotional and narrative elements of communication that can be equally persuasive. The role of humor, for example, has remained largely unexplored.   Objective: This study investigates whether theory-based videos can change people’s attitudes, beliefs, and intentions to receive the second COVID-19 vaccine. Our primary research question is: How do collectivistic and individualistic appeals, humor, and protagonist gender individually and jointly affect vaccination attitudes, beliefs, and intentions?   Methods: This project tapped into the underutilized Indian film industry—the world’s largest film producer—to promote vaccination messaging through short videos. Feedback from a community advisory board was utilized to inform the video scripts that were then shot by a production team. Eight videos were filmed and shared by adopting a 2 (appeal: individualistic or collectivistic) x 2 (tone: humor or non-humor) x 2 (protagonist gender: male or female) between-subjects design approach. Our sample includes Odia-speaking participants aged between 18 – 35 years old randomly assigned to watch one of the eight study videos. An online survey questionnaire, social media network analysis, and small group qualitative interviews will be utilized to explore how the entertainment-education videos can be used to reduce vaccine hesitancy.  Discussion: Vaccine messages do not fall into a cultural or cognitive vacuum. People process and make sense of information based on their prior experience, properties of the message, and their social environment. Yet, these considerations have taken secondary importance in vaccine communications. This research shows that it is possible to deliver high-caliber videos created in accordance with the audience's cultural and cognitive background.   Conclusions: This study will inform future health promotion messaging through brief videos on the internet.
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spelling pubmed-96521352022-11-21 Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol Bhaktaram, Ananya Ganjoo, Rohini Jamison, Amelia M. Burleson, Julia Pascual-Ferra, Paola Alperstein, Neil Barnett, Daniel J. Mohanty, Satyanarayan Orton, Peter Z. Parida, Manoj Kluegel, Eleanor Rath, Sidharth Rimal, Rajiv N. Gates Open Res Study Protocol Background: Vaccine hesitancy is one of the greatest challenges to the success of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination campaigns. Videos promoting vaccines have a narrow scope focusing solely on facts, and less on the emotional and narrative elements of communication that can be equally persuasive. The role of humor, for example, has remained largely unexplored.   Objective: This study investigates whether theory-based videos can change people’s attitudes, beliefs, and intentions to receive the second COVID-19 vaccine. Our primary research question is: How do collectivistic and individualistic appeals, humor, and protagonist gender individually and jointly affect vaccination attitudes, beliefs, and intentions?   Methods: This project tapped into the underutilized Indian film industry—the world’s largest film producer—to promote vaccination messaging through short videos. Feedback from a community advisory board was utilized to inform the video scripts that were then shot by a production team. Eight videos were filmed and shared by adopting a 2 (appeal: individualistic or collectivistic) x 2 (tone: humor or non-humor) x 2 (protagonist gender: male or female) between-subjects design approach. Our sample includes Odia-speaking participants aged between 18 – 35 years old randomly assigned to watch one of the eight study videos. An online survey questionnaire, social media network analysis, and small group qualitative interviews will be utilized to explore how the entertainment-education videos can be used to reduce vaccine hesitancy.  Discussion: Vaccine messages do not fall into a cultural or cognitive vacuum. People process and make sense of information based on their prior experience, properties of the message, and their social environment. Yet, these considerations have taken secondary importance in vaccine communications. This research shows that it is possible to deliver high-caliber videos created in accordance with the audience's cultural and cognitive background.   Conclusions: This study will inform future health promotion messaging through brief videos on the internet. F1000 Research Limited 2022-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9652135/ /pubmed/36415882 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13628.2 Text en Copyright: © 2022 Bhaktaram A et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Bhaktaram, Ananya
Ganjoo, Rohini
Jamison, Amelia M.
Burleson, Julia
Pascual-Ferra, Paola
Alperstein, Neil
Barnett, Daniel J.
Mohanty, Satyanarayan
Orton, Peter Z.
Parida, Manoj
Kluegel, Eleanor
Rath, Sidharth
Rimal, Rajiv N.
Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol
title Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol
title_full Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol
title_fullStr Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol
title_full_unstemmed Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol
title_short Creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote COVID-19 vaccination in India: A research protocol
title_sort creation, dissemination, and evaluation of videos to promote covid-19 vaccination in india: a research protocol
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9652135/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36415882
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13628.2
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