首页> 外文学位 >Immunizing Against Vaccine Hesitancy: An Assessment of Online Communication and Social Network Factors Impacting Vaccine Adoption.
【24h】

Immunizing Against Vaccine Hesitancy: An Assessment of Online Communication and Social Network Factors Impacting Vaccine Adoption.

机译:预防疫苗犹豫不决:评估影响疫苗采用的在线交流和社交网络因素。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

Vaccination adoption is a unique and complex issue. Many people turn to the Internet for information about health, including vaccine information. Examining what information people encounter online provides insight on what individuals may know about vaccination and how public health communications can be better prepared to address vaccination concerns. Similarly, social network factors have been shown to impact health behaviors. Assessing social network factors can provide insights into what specific network factors are used to make decisions about vaccination adoption. The three studies that constitute this dissertation collectively address the issue of vaccine hesitancy by addressing sources of vaccine information.;The first study describes the information about vaccinations that consumers find on the Internet using various search strategies. Specifically, the study sought to determine if negative, neutral and positive search terms retrieve vaccination information that differs in valence and confirms searchers' assumptions about vaccination. This study involved a content analysis of first-page Google search results using three negative, three neutral, and three positive search terms for the concepts "vaccine," "vaccination," and "MMR." Search term valence did, indeed, impact search results. Negatively valenced searches were more likely to retrieve websites that perpetuated vaccine myths. However, positively valenced searches did not retrieve websites that specifically advocated for vaccination. The most frequently perpetuated myth online continues to be that vaccines cause autism.;The second study reports a semantic network analysis of online vaccine information carried out to assess what human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine information is presented online. This study looked at the structure of the online HPV vaccine information network and the meanings associated with the HPV vaccine in online web pages. A semantic network analysis of first-page Google search results was conducted and showed high levels of word interconnectivity suggesting a rich set of semantic links and a very integrated set of concepts. HPV vaccine information focuses on HPV vaccine side effects over HPV vaccine benefits.;The third study examines HPV vaccination adoption among young adults through an online survey of Northern California university students ( n = 346). Differences among HPV vaccine adopters and nonadopters were assessed for HPV and HPV vaccine source trust, HPV and HPV vaccine knowledge and social network homophily and density. Analysis included descriptive and bivariate analysis as well as binomial logistic regression analysis for identifying social network factor predictors of HPV vaccine adoption. There was an association between a respondent's HPV vaccination adoption and whether or not they perceive their social network to have adopted the HPV vaccine. HPV nonadopters had more dense social networks, which suggests limited sources of novel information.;Websites need to concentrate on addressing falsehoods about vaccines in order to rebut unfounded claims their visitors might have heard and inoculate these people against false claims they may encounter in the future. Public health communications should continue to concentrate on improving online vaccine messages by focusing on the benefits of vaccination, highlighting the risks of not vaccinating and minimizing the perceived risks of vaccination by not concentrating on communicating vaccine side effects. In order to gain better insight into social network factors affecting vaccine adoption, patient privacy guidelines need to move to address wider socio-ethical concerns by allowing researchers wider access to individuals' vaccine adoption information. Protecting individual privacy must be balanced with the need to protect the public at large from infectious diseases.
机译:接种疫苗是一个独特而复杂的问题。许多人转向Internet获取有关健康的信息,包括疫苗信息。通过检查人们在网上遇到的信息,可以洞悉个人可能对疫苗接种有什么了解,以及如何更好地准备公共卫生沟通以解决疫苗接种问题。同样,社交网络因素已显示出会影响健康行为。评估社交网络因素可以提供有关哪些特定网络因素用于制定疫苗接种决策的见解。构成本文的三项研究通过解决疫苗信息的来源共同解决了疫苗犹豫的问题。第一项研究描述了消费者使用各种搜索策略在互联网上找到的有关疫苗的信息。具体而言,该研究试图确定阴性,中性和阳性搜索词是否检索价数不同的疫苗接种信息,并确认搜索者对疫苗接种的假设。这项研究涉及对首页Google搜索结果的内容分析,其中使用了三个否定,三个中性和三个肯定搜索字词来表示“疫苗”,“疫苗接种”和“ MMR”的概念。搜索字词的价格确实确实会影响搜索结果。负价搜索更有可能检索延续疫苗神话的网站。但是,正价搜索未检索到专门提倡接种疫苗的网站。在线上最常出现的神话仍然是疫苗导致自闭症。;第二项研究报告了在线疫苗信息的语义网络分析,以评估哪些人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗信息在线展示。这项研究探讨了在线HPV疫苗信息网络的结构以及在线网页中与HPV疫苗相关的含义。进行了对第一页Google搜索结果的语义网络分析,结果表明,单词的高度互连性表明存在丰富的语义链接集和非常集成的概念集。 HPV疫苗信息侧重于HPV疫苗对HPV疫苗益处的副作用。;第三项研究通过对北加州大学生的在线调查(n = 346)检查了年轻人中HPV疫苗的采用情况。评估了HPV疫苗采用者和非采纳者之间的差异,以评估HPV和HPV疫苗的来源信任度,HPV和HPV疫苗知识以及社交网络的同质性和密度。分析包括描述性和双变量分析,以及二项式逻辑回归分析,用于确定采用HPV疫苗的社会网络因素预测因子。受访者采用HPV疫苗接种与他们是否认为自己的社交网络已采用HPV疫苗之间存在关联。 HPV非采用者的社交网络更加密集,这表明新颖信息的来源有限。网站需要集中精力解决有关疫苗的虚假事实,以驳回其访客可能听到的毫无根据的主张,并接种这些人以防止他们将来可能遇到的虚假主张。公共卫生交流应继续关注疫苗接种的好处,着重强调不接种疫苗的风险,并通过不关注疫苗副作用的传播来最大程度地减少接种疫苗的风险,从而继续致力于改善在线疫苗信息。为了更好地了解影响疫苗采用的社会网络因素,患者隐私指南需要通过允许研究人员更广泛地访问个人疫苗采用信息来解决更广泛的社会伦理问题。保护个人隐私必须与保护公众免受传染病的需求相平衡。

著录项

  • 作者

    Ruiz, Jeanette B.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Davis.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Davis.;
  • 学科 Communication.;Public health.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2015
  • 页码 104 p.
  • 总页数 104
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:53:03

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号