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An online experiment of NHS information framing on mothers’ vaccination intention of children against COVID-19

Authors :
Van Hoecke, Audrey L.
Sanders, Jet G.
Van Hoecke, Audrey L.
Sanders, Jet G.

Abstract

Children under the age of 5, will likely all be offered vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 soon. Parental concerns over vaccination of children are long standing and could impede the success of a vaccination campaign. In the UK, a trusted source to inform vaccination choices is the NHS website. Here we used a randomized controlled experiment of framing effects in NHS information content for COVID-19 and flu with 550 mothers under the age of 5. We compared both vaccination offers following two commonly used frames in vaccination informational campaigns: alerting to the risks of no vaccination for the child itself vs. those in their community. We find that vaccination intention was twice as high when risks to the child are emphasized, relative to risks to the community. Exploratory analyses suggest that these effects may differ between white and non-white mothers. Whilst communication directed at adult vaccination against COVID-19 generally focuses on risks of infecting others, communication about vaccination of children may benefit from emphasizing risks to the children themselves. This pattern is in line with flu vaccination research from pre-COVID-19 times.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, Van Hoecke, Audrey L. and Sanders, Jet G. (2022) An online experiment of NHS information framing on mothers’ vaccination intention of children against COVID-19. Vaccines, 10 (5). ISSN 2076-393X, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1384432069
Document Type :
Electronic Resource