医疗保健
代理(哲学)
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
公共卫生
心理学
创新的传播
环境卫生
医学
公共关系
疾病
业务
护理部
营销
政治学
传染病(医学专业)
社会学
法学
病理
社会科学
作者
Rachel A. Smith,Curtis Bone,Ashley Visco,William A. Calo,Jessica Wright,Destin Groff,Robert P. Lennon
标识
DOI:10.1080/10810730.2022.2111619
摘要
We sought to identify barriers to COVID-19 vaccine uptake among persons who are socially vulnerable in light of the natural cycle of innovation diffusion. Widespread adoption of a health innovation requires a cadre of opinion leaders to build on successes experienced by early adopters. One type of opinion leader in healthcare are health mavens: members of a community who maintain up-to-date health knowledge and share their knowledge others. We surveyed 139 persons who are socially vulnerable regarding their COVID-19 vaccination intention, and evaluated their responses based on psychological traits captured by two scales: innovativeness and health mavenism. Health mavenism was not strongly correlated with COVID-19 vaccine intention. Health mavens often relied on their own healthcare providers (n = 46) and health agency websites (n = 42) for vaccine information. Those who relied on their faith leaders (n = 4) reported a lower likelihood of getting vaccinated (31.5% vs. 76.0%, p < .05). The observed lack of support by health mavens represents a critical barrier to COVID-19 vaccine uptake; targeting campaigns to health mavens may increase COVID-19 vaccine uptake in socially vulnerable communities.
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