Cargando…

How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy

RATIONALE: Despite its importance to counter the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccination has raised hesitation in large segments of the population. This hesitation makes it important to understand the mechanisms underlying vaccine acceptance. To this end, the study adopts the Semiotic Cultural Psychology The...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cordella, Barbara, Signore, Fulvio, Andreassi, Silvia, De Dominicis, Serena, Gennaro, Alessandro, Iuso, Salvatore, Mannarini, Terri, Kerusauskaite, Skaiste, Kosic, Ankica, Reho, Matteo, Rochira, Alessia, Rocchi, Giulia, Salvatore, Sergio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Ltd. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9839458/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36702028
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115671
_version_ 1784869487784230912
author Cordella, Barbara
Signore, Fulvio
Andreassi, Silvia
De Dominicis, Serena
Gennaro, Alessandro
Iuso, Salvatore
Mannarini, Terri
Kerusauskaite, Skaiste
Kosic, Ankica
Reho, Matteo
Rochira, Alessia
Rocchi, Giulia
Salvatore, Sergio
author_facet Cordella, Barbara
Signore, Fulvio
Andreassi, Silvia
De Dominicis, Serena
Gennaro, Alessandro
Iuso, Salvatore
Mannarini, Terri
Kerusauskaite, Skaiste
Kosic, Ankica
Reho, Matteo
Rochira, Alessia
Rocchi, Giulia
Salvatore, Sergio
author_sort Cordella, Barbara
collection PubMed
description RATIONALE: Despite its importance to counter the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccination has raised hesitation in large segments of the population. This hesitation makes it important to understand the mechanisms underlying vaccine acceptance. To this end, the study adopts the Semiotic Cultural Psychology Theory, holding that social behaviors – and therefore, vaccination acceptance – depend on the cultural meanings in terms of which people interpret the social world. OBJECTIVE: The study aims at estimating the impact a) of the way people interpret the socio-institutional context of the pandemic and b) of the underlying cultural worldviews on vaccine acceptance. More particularly, the study tested the three following hypotheses. a) The meanings grounding the interpretation of the socio-institutional framework – that is, trust in institutions and political values – are an antecedent of vaccination acceptance. b) The impact of these meanings is moderated by the cultural worldviews (operationalized as symbolic universes). And c), the magnitude of the symbolic universes’ moderator effect depends on the uncertainty to which the respondent is exposed. The exposure to uncertainty was estimated in terms of socioeconomic status – the lower the status, the high the exposure to uncertainty. METHODS: An Italian representative sample (N = 3020) completed a questionnaire, measuring vaccination acceptance, the meanings attributed to the socio-institutional context – that is, political values and trust in institutions – and symbolic universes. RESULTS: The findings were consistent with the hypotheses. a) Structural equation modelling proved that vaccine acceptance was predicted by trust in institutions. b) Multigroup analysis revealed that symbolic universes moderated the correlation between trust in institutions and vaccine acceptance. And c), the moderation effect of symbolic universes proved to occur only in the segment of lower socio-economic status (i.e., the group exposed to higher uncertainty). CONCLUSIONS: Vaccination acceptance is not only a medical issue; it is also dependent upon the rationalization of the socio-institutional context. Implications for the promotion of vaccination acceptance are discussed.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9839458
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Elsevier Ltd.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98394582023-01-17 How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy Cordella, Barbara Signore, Fulvio Andreassi, Silvia De Dominicis, Serena Gennaro, Alessandro Iuso, Salvatore Mannarini, Terri Kerusauskaite, Skaiste Kosic, Ankica Reho, Matteo Rochira, Alessia Rocchi, Giulia Salvatore, Sergio Soc Sci Med Article RATIONALE: Despite its importance to counter the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccination has raised hesitation in large segments of the population. This hesitation makes it important to understand the mechanisms underlying vaccine acceptance. To this end, the study adopts the Semiotic Cultural Psychology Theory, holding that social behaviors – and therefore, vaccination acceptance – depend on the cultural meanings in terms of which people interpret the social world. OBJECTIVE: The study aims at estimating the impact a) of the way people interpret the socio-institutional context of the pandemic and b) of the underlying cultural worldviews on vaccine acceptance. More particularly, the study tested the three following hypotheses. a) The meanings grounding the interpretation of the socio-institutional framework – that is, trust in institutions and political values – are an antecedent of vaccination acceptance. b) The impact of these meanings is moderated by the cultural worldviews (operationalized as symbolic universes). And c), the magnitude of the symbolic universes’ moderator effect depends on the uncertainty to which the respondent is exposed. The exposure to uncertainty was estimated in terms of socioeconomic status – the lower the status, the high the exposure to uncertainty. METHODS: An Italian representative sample (N = 3020) completed a questionnaire, measuring vaccination acceptance, the meanings attributed to the socio-institutional context – that is, political values and trust in institutions – and symbolic universes. RESULTS: The findings were consistent with the hypotheses. a) Structural equation modelling proved that vaccine acceptance was predicted by trust in institutions. b) Multigroup analysis revealed that symbolic universes moderated the correlation between trust in institutions and vaccine acceptance. And c), the moderation effect of symbolic universes proved to occur only in the segment of lower socio-economic status (i.e., the group exposed to higher uncertainty). CONCLUSIONS: Vaccination acceptance is not only a medical issue; it is also dependent upon the rationalization of the socio-institutional context. Implications for the promotion of vaccination acceptance are discussed. Elsevier Ltd. 2023-03 2023-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9839458/ /pubmed/36702028 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115671 Text en © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Article
Cordella, Barbara
Signore, Fulvio
Andreassi, Silvia
De Dominicis, Serena
Gennaro, Alessandro
Iuso, Salvatore
Mannarini, Terri
Kerusauskaite, Skaiste
Kosic, Ankica
Reho, Matteo
Rochira, Alessia
Rocchi, Giulia
Salvatore, Sergio
How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy
title How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy
title_full How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy
title_fullStr How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy
title_full_unstemmed How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy
title_short How socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to COVID-19 acceptance rates: A representative study in Italy
title_sort how socio-institutional contexts and cultural worldviews relate to covid-19 acceptance rates: a representative study in italy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9839458/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36702028
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115671
work_keys_str_mv AT cordellabarbara howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT signorefulvio howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT andreassisilvia howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT dedominicisserena howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT gennaroalessandro howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT iusosalvatore howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT mannariniterri howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT kerusauskaiteskaiste howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT kosicankica howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT rehomatteo howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT rochiraalessia howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT rocchigiulia howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly
AT salvatoresergio howsocioinstitutionalcontextsandculturalworldviewsrelatetocovid19acceptanceratesarepresentativestudyinitaly