Secondary Risk in COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions: A Theoretical Contribution to the Protection Motivation Paradigm
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Prince, Melvin (Author)
- Kim, Young (Author)
Title
Secondary Risk in COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions: A Theoretical Contribution to the Protection Motivation Paradigm
Abstract
This study presents an original model that features the emotion of fear of COVID-19 as a direct effect on vaccination intentions. A central research question addressed in the study is what roles do the emotion of fear of contracting COVID-19 and the threat posed by uptake of the COVID-19 vaccination play in levels of vaccination intention? The study used a structural equation model (SEM) and applied the SmartPLS 3.2.6 data analysis tool for model estimation and multivariate analysis variables. A key finding is that vaccination resistance is strongest when fear of COVID-19 is lower, and vaccination threat higher. Vaccination threat appraisal and vaccination intention were found to have a negative relationship. Response costs at higher levels lessen motivation for COVID-19 vaccination. Research implications include research-based targeting of differing segments by their primary fear, either fear of COVID-19 or of the preventative vaccine.
Publication
Journal of Applied Social Science
Publisher
SAGE Publications Inc
Date
2023-04-11
Pages
19367244231159594
Citation Key
princeSecondaryRiskCOVID192023
Accessed
4/27/23, 1:51 PM
ISSN
1936-7244
Short Title
Secondary Risk in COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions
Language
en
Library Catalog
SAGE Journals
Extra
0 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation
Prince, M., & Kim, Y. (2023). Secondary Risk in COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions: A Theoretical Contribution to the Protection Motivation Paradigm. Journal of Applied Social Science, 19367244231159594. https://doi.org/10.1177/19367244231159594
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