Publications by authors named "Lisset Martinez-Berman"

Personality is known to affect compliance with health-protective behaviors and it has been shown that effective public health messaging can be informed by an understanding of that relationship. Thus, we aimed to evaluate the role personality might play in implementing personal protective measures (PPMs) that can prevent mosquito-borne diseases. This is the first mosquito-related knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) study to incorporate a measure of personality using the Big Five: openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc across the world. Public health efforts to combat the disease and return life to normalcy largely rests upon COVID-19 vaccination distribution and uptake. Thus, it is critical to examine factors that predict people's intentions to vaccinate.

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Vaccinations and anti-vaccination attitudes have reclaimed the spotlight as a crucial health behavior because of the recent surge in outbreaks of preventable diseases. One factor that may be contributing to this trend is the outspoken role that anti-vaccination celebrities play. The main purpose of the present study was to determine whether anti-vaccination attitudes are related to celebrity admiration.

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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Lisset Martinez-Berman"

  • - Lisset Martinez-Berman's research focuses on the intersection of personality traits, psychosocial factors, and public health behaviors, exploring how these elements influence attitudes and practices related to disease prevention, particularly in the context of mosquito-borne diseases and COVID-19 vaccination.
  • - In her 2022 study, she investigated how personality characteristics align with individual behaviors and attitudes towards mosquito-borne diseases, emphasizing the role of the Big Five personality traits in informing public health messaging.
  • - Her 2023 research highlights psychosocial predictors of COVID-19 vaccination intentions, while another study from 2021 examines the relationship between celebrity admiration and anti-vaccination attitudes, indicating how social influences may affect public health compliance.