The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in Poland
Background: The research focused on the relationships between attitudes towards vaccination and the trust placed in different sources of information (science, experts and the information available on the Internet) before and during COVID-19. Method: A longitudinal design was applied with the first m...
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doaj-5e4e6a6b20e84dc999ba45708a8b167e2021-08-26T14:26:01ZengMDPI AGVaccines2076-393X2021-08-01993393310.3390/vaccines9080933The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in PolandKatarzyna Stasiuk0Mateusz Polak1Dariusz Dolinski2Jozef Maciuszek3Institute of Applied Psychology, Jagiellonian University, 31-007 Krakow, PolandInstitute of Applied Psychology, Jagiellonian University, 31-007 Krakow, PolandDepartment of Psychology in Wroclaw, SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities, 03-815 Warsaw, PolandInstitute of Applied Psychology, Jagiellonian University, 31-007 Krakow, PolandBackground: The research focused on the relationships between attitudes towards vaccination and the trust placed in different sources of information (science, experts and the information available on the Internet) before and during COVID-19. Method: A longitudinal design was applied with the first measurement in February 2018 (<i>N</i> = 1039). The second measurement (<i>N</i> = 400) was carried out in December 2020 to test if the pandemic influenced the trust in different sources of information. Results: The final analyses carried out on final sample of 400 participants showed that there has been no change in trust in the Internet as a source of knowledge about health during the pandemic. However, the trust in science, physicians, subjective health knowledge, as well as the attitude towards the vaccination has declined. Regression analysis also showed that changes in the level of trust in physicians and science were associated with analogous (in the same direction) changes in attitudes toward vaccination. The study was also focused on the trust in different sources of health knowledge as possible predictors of willingness to be vaccinated against SARS-nCoV-2. However, it appeared that the selected predictors explained a small part of the variance. This suggests that attitudes toward the new COVID vaccines may have different sources than attitudes toward vaccines that have been known to the public for a long time.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-393X/9/8/933attitude towards vaccinationtrust in physicianstrust in scienceInternet as the source of health informationCOVID-19 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Katarzyna Stasiuk Mateusz Polak Dariusz Dolinski Jozef Maciuszek |
spellingShingle |
Katarzyna Stasiuk Mateusz Polak Dariusz Dolinski Jozef Maciuszek The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in Poland Vaccines attitude towards vaccination trust in physicians trust in science Internet as the source of health information COVID-19 |
author_facet |
Katarzyna Stasiuk Mateusz Polak Dariusz Dolinski Jozef Maciuszek |
author_sort |
Katarzyna Stasiuk |
title |
The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in Poland |
title_short |
The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in Poland |
title_full |
The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in Poland |
title_fullStr |
The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in Poland |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Credibility of Health Information Sources as Predictors of Attitudes toward Vaccination—The Results from a Longitudinal Study in Poland |
title_sort |
credibility of health information sources as predictors of attitudes toward vaccination—the results from a longitudinal study in poland |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Vaccines |
issn |
2076-393X |
publishDate |
2021-08-01 |
description |
Background: The research focused on the relationships between attitudes towards vaccination and the trust placed in different sources of information (science, experts and the information available on the Internet) before and during COVID-19. Method: A longitudinal design was applied with the first measurement in February 2018 (<i>N</i> = 1039). The second measurement (<i>N</i> = 400) was carried out in December 2020 to test if the pandemic influenced the trust in different sources of information. Results: The final analyses carried out on final sample of 400 participants showed that there has been no change in trust in the Internet as a source of knowledge about health during the pandemic. However, the trust in science, physicians, subjective health knowledge, as well as the attitude towards the vaccination has declined. Regression analysis also showed that changes in the level of trust in physicians and science were associated with analogous (in the same direction) changes in attitudes toward vaccination. The study was also focused on the trust in different sources of health knowledge as possible predictors of willingness to be vaccinated against SARS-nCoV-2. However, it appeared that the selected predictors explained a small part of the variance. This suggests that attitudes toward the new COVID vaccines may have different sources than attitudes toward vaccines that have been known to the public for a long time. |
topic |
attitude towards vaccination trust in physicians trust in science Internet as the source of health information COVID-19 |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-393X/9/8/933 |
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