Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.

<h4>Background</h4>Monitoring the reasons why a considerable number of people do not receive recommended vaccinations allows identification of important trends over time, and designing and evaluating strategies to address vaccine hesitancy and increase vaccine uptake. Existing validated...

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Main Authors: Cornelia Betsch, Philipp Schmid, Dorothee Heinemeier, Lars Korn, Cindy Holtmann, Robert Böhm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208601
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spelling doaj-ed17a28334934c678379e389133fabc12021-03-04T10:39:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011312e020860110.1371/journal.pone.0208601Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.Cornelia BetschPhilipp SchmidDorothee HeinemeierLars KornCindy HoltmannRobert Böhm<h4>Background</h4>Monitoring the reasons why a considerable number of people do not receive recommended vaccinations allows identification of important trends over time, and designing and evaluating strategies to address vaccine hesitancy and increase vaccine uptake. Existing validated measures assessing vaccine hesitancy focus primarily on confidence in vaccines and the system that delivers them. However, empirical and theoretical work has stated that complacency (not perceiving diseases as high risk), constraints (structural and psychological barriers), calculation (engagement in extensive information searching), and aspects pertaining to collective responsibility (willingness to protect others) also play a role in explaining vaccination behavior. The objective was therefore to develop a validated measure of these 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.<h4>Methods and findings</h4>Three cross-sectional studies were conducted. Study 1 uses factor analysis to develop an initial scale and assesses the sub-scales' convergent, discriminant, and concurrent validity (N = 1,445, two German convenience-samples). In Study 2, a sample representative regarding age and gender for the German population (N = 1,003) completed the measure for vaccination in general and for specific vaccinations to assess the potential need for a vaccine-specific wording of items. Study 3 compared the novel scale's performance with six existing measures of vaccine hesitancy (N = 350, US convenience-sample). As an outcome, a long (15-item) and short (5-item) 5C scale were developed as reliable and valid indicators of confidence, complacency, constraints, calculation, and collective responsibility. The 5C sub-scales correlated with relevant psychological concepts, such as attitude (confidence), perceived personal health status and invulnerability (complacency), self-control (constraints), preference for deliberation (calculation), and communal orientation (collective responsibility), among others. The new scale provided similar results when formulated in a general vs. vaccine-specific way (Study 2). In a comparison of seven measures the 5C scale was constantly among the scales that explained the highest amounts of variance in analyses predicting single vaccinations (between 20% and 40%; Study 3). The present studies are limited to the concurrent validity of the scales.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The 5C scale provides a novel tool to monitor psychological antecedents of vaccination and facilitates diagnosis, intervention design and evaluation. Its short version is suitable for field settings and regular global monitoring of relevant antecedents of vaccination.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208601
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cornelia Betsch
Philipp Schmid
Dorothee Heinemeier
Lars Korn
Cindy Holtmann
Robert Böhm
spellingShingle Cornelia Betsch
Philipp Schmid
Dorothee Heinemeier
Lars Korn
Cindy Holtmann
Robert Böhm
Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Cornelia Betsch
Philipp Schmid
Dorothee Heinemeier
Lars Korn
Cindy Holtmann
Robert Böhm
author_sort Cornelia Betsch
title Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.
title_short Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.
title_full Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.
title_fullStr Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.
title_full_unstemmed Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.
title_sort beyond confidence: development of a measure assessing the 5c psychological antecedents of vaccination.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description <h4>Background</h4>Monitoring the reasons why a considerable number of people do not receive recommended vaccinations allows identification of important trends over time, and designing and evaluating strategies to address vaccine hesitancy and increase vaccine uptake. Existing validated measures assessing vaccine hesitancy focus primarily on confidence in vaccines and the system that delivers them. However, empirical and theoretical work has stated that complacency (not perceiving diseases as high risk), constraints (structural and psychological barriers), calculation (engagement in extensive information searching), and aspects pertaining to collective responsibility (willingness to protect others) also play a role in explaining vaccination behavior. The objective was therefore to develop a validated measure of these 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination.<h4>Methods and findings</h4>Three cross-sectional studies were conducted. Study 1 uses factor analysis to develop an initial scale and assesses the sub-scales' convergent, discriminant, and concurrent validity (N = 1,445, two German convenience-samples). In Study 2, a sample representative regarding age and gender for the German population (N = 1,003) completed the measure for vaccination in general and for specific vaccinations to assess the potential need for a vaccine-specific wording of items. Study 3 compared the novel scale's performance with six existing measures of vaccine hesitancy (N = 350, US convenience-sample). As an outcome, a long (15-item) and short (5-item) 5C scale were developed as reliable and valid indicators of confidence, complacency, constraints, calculation, and collective responsibility. The 5C sub-scales correlated with relevant psychological concepts, such as attitude (confidence), perceived personal health status and invulnerability (complacency), self-control (constraints), preference for deliberation (calculation), and communal orientation (collective responsibility), among others. The new scale provided similar results when formulated in a general vs. vaccine-specific way (Study 2). In a comparison of seven measures the 5C scale was constantly among the scales that explained the highest amounts of variance in analyses predicting single vaccinations (between 20% and 40%; Study 3). The present studies are limited to the concurrent validity of the scales.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The 5C scale provides a novel tool to monitor psychological antecedents of vaccination and facilitates diagnosis, intervention design and evaluation. Its short version is suitable for field settings and regular global monitoring of relevant antecedents of vaccination.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0208601
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