Article citationsMore>>
Murphy, J., Vallières, F., Bentall, R., Shevlin, M., McBride, O., Hartman, T., McKay, R., Bennett, K., Mason, L., Gibson-Miller, J., Levita, L., Martinez, A., Stocks, T., Karatzias, T., & Hyland P. (2021). Psychological Characteristics Associated with COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy and Resistance in Ireland and the United Kingdom. Nature Communications, 12, Article No. 29.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-20226-9
has been cited by the following article:
-
TITLE:
Evaluating the Influence of Social Media Use in COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy of Residents of Owerri Metropolis
AUTHORS:
Nnaemeka E. Ijioma, Chinwe Nze
KEYWORDS:
Coronavirus, Vaccine Hesitancy, Social Media, Cultivation Theory, COVID-19 Vaccine, WhatsApp, NCDC, WHO
JOURNAL NAME:
Advances in Journalism and Communication,
Vol.10 No.1,
January
21,
2022
ABSTRACT: The study aimed to find out the level of vaccine hesitancy to COVID-19 vaccines in Nigeria and determine whether social media is facilitating the spread of anti-vaccination messages about COVID-19 vaccines and the extent of vaccine hesitancy which is attributable to use of social media. The researchers used the cultivation theory to explain how frequent use of social media for information about the coronavirus pandemic has influenced users’ attitudes towards the COVID-19 vaccine. A survey was conducted which produced quantitative data from 300 respondents using the multi-stage sampling technique, with the questionnaire as the instrument to elicit data on how social media influenced respondents’ decision on getting immunized. Findings showed that hesitancy is high in Nigeria. It revealed that social media is facilitating the spread of misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine. The researchers found out that hesitancy is attributable to social media because social media was the leading information source (45%) that enabled respondents to make the decision not to take the COVID-19 vaccine. This study recommends that governments, the NCDC, the NPHCDA, the health industry and the media must use social media, alongside traditional media to propagate vaccine campaigns to negate the misinformation spreading online.
Related Articles:
-
Yun Sun, Minghui Yang, Hengrong Cui, Minhua Chen, Yukun Zhu, Xiaowei Sun
-
Xiaochun Mei
-
Ezra Davar
-
Laurence Stephenson
-
Jai Dev Chandel, Nand Lal Singh