Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel

Influenza vaccination for health care personnel (HCP) is recommended particularly because it indirectly protects patients from contracting the disease. Vaccinating can therefore be interpreted as a prosocial act. However, HCP vaccination rates are often far too low to prevent nosocomial infections....

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Main Authors: Robert Böhm, Cornelia Betsch, Lars Korn, Cindy Holtmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2016-01-01
Series:BioMed Research International
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/6870984
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spelling doaj-cd9bb99817d0429e91b9a4421f3dc4682020-11-24T23:45:04ZengHindawi LimitedBioMed Research International2314-61332314-61412016-01-01201610.1155/2016/68709846870984Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care PersonnelRobert Böhm0Cornelia Betsch1Lars Korn2Cindy Holtmann3School of Business and Economics, RWTH Aachen University, Templergraben 64, 52062 Aachen, GermanyCenter for Empirical Research in Economics and Behavioral Sciences (CEREB) and Department of Psychology, University of Erfurt, Nordhäuser Str. 63, 99089 Erfurt, GermanyCenter for Empirical Research in Economics and Behavioral Sciences (CEREB) and Department of Psychology, University of Erfurt, Nordhäuser Str. 63, 99089 Erfurt, GermanyCenter for Empirical Research in Economics and Behavioral Sciences (CEREB) and Department of Psychology, University of Erfurt, Nordhäuser Str. 63, 99089 Erfurt, GermanyInfluenza vaccination for health care personnel (HCP) is recommended particularly because it indirectly protects patients from contracting the disease. Vaccinating can therefore be interpreted as a prosocial act. However, HCP vaccination rates are often far too low to prevent nosocomial infections. Effective interventions are needed to increase HCP’s influenza vaccine uptake. Here we devise a novel tool to experimentally test interventions that aim at increasing prosocially motivated vaccine uptake under controlled conditions. We conducted a large-scale and cross-cultural experiment with participants from countries with either a collectivistic (South Korea) or an individualistic (USA) cultural background. Results showed that prosocially motivated vaccination was more likely in South Korea compared to the US, mediated by a greater perception of vaccination as a social act. However, changing the default of vaccination, such that participants had to opt out rather than to opt in, increased vaccine uptake in the US and therefore compensated for the lower level of prosocial vaccination. In sum, the present study provides both a novel method to investigate HCP influenza vaccination behavior and interventions to increase their vaccine uptake.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/6870984
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Böhm
Cornelia Betsch
Lars Korn
Cindy Holtmann
spellingShingle Robert Böhm
Cornelia Betsch
Lars Korn
Cindy Holtmann
Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel
BioMed Research International
author_facet Robert Böhm
Cornelia Betsch
Lars Korn
Cindy Holtmann
author_sort Robert Böhm
title Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel
title_short Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel
title_full Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel
title_fullStr Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel
title_full_unstemmed Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel
title_sort exploring and promoting prosocial vaccination: a cross-cultural experiment on vaccination of health care personnel
publisher Hindawi Limited
series BioMed Research International
issn 2314-6133
2314-6141
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Influenza vaccination for health care personnel (HCP) is recommended particularly because it indirectly protects patients from contracting the disease. Vaccinating can therefore be interpreted as a prosocial act. However, HCP vaccination rates are often far too low to prevent nosocomial infections. Effective interventions are needed to increase HCP’s influenza vaccine uptake. Here we devise a novel tool to experimentally test interventions that aim at increasing prosocially motivated vaccine uptake under controlled conditions. We conducted a large-scale and cross-cultural experiment with participants from countries with either a collectivistic (South Korea) or an individualistic (USA) cultural background. Results showed that prosocially motivated vaccination was more likely in South Korea compared to the US, mediated by a greater perception of vaccination as a social act. However, changing the default of vaccination, such that participants had to opt out rather than to opt in, increased vaccine uptake in the US and therefore compensated for the lower level of prosocial vaccination. In sum, the present study provides both a novel method to investigate HCP influenza vaccination behavior and interventions to increase their vaccine uptake.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/6870984
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