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Cross-country assessment of the unique contributions of psychological factors to vaccination: Perspectives on the COVID-19 pandemic. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study examined psychological factors influencing COVID-19 vaccination attitudes across four countries: Ghana, India, New Zealand, and Germany, with 1822 participants involved.
  • Each country showed different key psychological predictors, such as positive affect in Ghana (7%), self-compassion in India (66%), dispositional optimism in New Zealand (5%), and compassion for others in Germany (2%).
  • The findings suggest that emotional well-being is crucial for improving vaccination rates, and addressing psychological distress can also positively impact attitudes toward vaccination.

Article Abstract

We have identified the most relevant and significant psychological factors in relation to COVID-19 vaccination attitudes in Ghana, Germany, New Zealand and India. This study recruited 1822 participants from the general populations of India ( = 411), New Zealand ( = 413), Ghana ( = 523) and Germany ( = 475) to participate in a cross-sectional online survey. After controlling for the country of residence, individual psychological factors played a significant role in shaping attitudes towards COVID-19 vaccination. The results also revealed strong direct predictors that explained significant portions of the variance in the COVID-19 vaccination attitudes. Positive affect emerged as the strongest contributor in Ghana (7%), while self-compassion strongly influenced COVID-19 vaccination attitudes in India (66%). Dispositional optimism was the strongest predictor in New Zealand (5%). In Germany, compassion towards others was the strongest positive predictor (2%), while psychological distress had a strong negative impact (3%). Results highlight the importance of promoting emotional well-being to enhance vaccination coverage.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13591053241266592DOI Listing

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