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A tale of two paths to vaccine acceptance: self-interest and collective interest effect, mediated by institutional trust, and moderated by gender

Health and Fitness

A tale of two paths to vaccine acceptance: self-interest and collective interest effect, mediated by institutional trust, and moderated by gender

O. Kol, D. Zimand-sheiner, et al.

This study by Ofrit Kol, Dorit Zimand-Sheiner, and Shalom Levy unveils a conceptual framework on how self-interest and collective interest shape vaccination attitudes. With institutional trust playing a crucial mediating role and gender adding an interesting twist, the findings highlight the complexities behind vaccine acceptance. Explore the nuances of trust and societal motivations in the context of health behavior.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Coronavirus and other prevailing viruses continue to remain a health threat and challenge the efforts of institutions to promote vaccination acceptance. The current study's aim is to propose a conceptual framework explaining the role of individual motivators (such as self-interest and collective interest) in shaping attitudes toward vaccination while emphasizing the pivotal role of institutional trust as a mediator and gender as a moderator. Data were collected via an online panel survey among Israelis (N = 464), and SEM statistics were used to test the model empirically. The path analysis model supports the positive direct effect of collective interest and the negative effect of self-interest. Additionally, it shows an indirect effect through the mediation effect of institutional trust and gender moderation. Therefore, institutional trust may significantly influence self-interest people's attitudes toward vaccines. Furthermore, since females process information more comprehensively, their developed trustworthiness in institutions has an increased impact on vaccine acceptance. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
May 13, 2024
Authors
Ofrit Kol, Dorit Zimand-Sheiner, Shalom Levy
Tags
vaccination attitudes
institutional trust
self-interest
collective interest
gender
health behavior
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