29 research outputs found
COVIDâ19 vaccine hesitancy: The synergistic effect of anxiety and proactive coping
Abstract Background This study sought to identify cognitive and behavioral predictors of COVIDâ19 vaccine hesitancy. Specifically, this study examined the effect of anxiety about developing COVIDâ19 and proactive coping behavior on the likelihood of reporting COVIDâ19 vaccine hesitancy in a sample of adults living in the United States. Methods An online survey of proactive coping strategies, anxiety related to developing COVIDâ19, and vaccine hesitancy was administered in October 2020 to 534 adults aged 21â79âyears old. Age, gender, race, selfârated health, years of education, COVIDâ19 knowledge, and perceived constraints were included as covariates. Results Over half of the study participants (56.7%) were COVIDâ19 vaccine hesitant. People who were less anxious about developing COVIDâ19 were more likely to be vaccine hesitant. A statistically significant COVIDâ19 anxiety Ă proactive coping interaction showed the odds of vaccine hesitancy was highest among individuals with low anxiety about developing COVIDâ19 and high proactive coping, whereas vaccine hesitancy was lowest among individuals with high COVIDâ19 anxiety and high proactive coping. Conclusion Results support a futureâoriented approach to public health outreach efforts regarding COVIDâ19 vaccines. Improvement of proactive coping skills and emphasis on the likelihood of contracting COVIDâ19 may be more effective in increasing vaccine uptake than simply restating scientific facts regarding safety or efficacy