| Literature DB >> 35133549 |
Shifeng Li1,2, Yingchun Xia3,4, Wei Zhao3,4, Xiaohui Miao3,4, Qiongying Xu3,4.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that self-affirmation increases acceptance of a message and motivates health behavior change. The present study investigated whether self-affirmation increases the acceptance of persuasive messages on COVID-19 vaccines and promotes vaccination intention. A total of 144 participants were randomly assigned to the self-affirmation (n = 72) or control (n = 72) groups before reading a persuasive message on COVID-19 vaccines. The results revealed that the self-affirmation group showed significantly higher acceptance of persuasive information on COVID-19 vaccines than the control group. Additionally, the self-affirmation group also showed significantly higher post-experiment vaccination intention than the control group. Mediation analysis indicated that increased acceptance of persuasive information significantly mediated the beneficial effects of self-affirmation on post-experiment vaccination intention. The present study demonstrated that self-affirmation could be an effective strategy for increasing the acceptance of persuasive messages on COVID-19 vaccines and promoting vaccination intention.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptance of messages; COVID-19; Randomized controlled trial; Self-affirmation; Vaccination intention
Year: 2022 PMID: 35133549 DOI: 10.1007/s10865-022-00292-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Med ISSN: 0160-7715