Vaccine hesitancy and conspiracy beliefs are social issues of growing concern which have arisen particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to investigate the multifaceted relationship between a hesitant attitude towards vaccination, conspiracy thinking, fear of infection, and the dimensions of epistemic trust, mistrust, and credulity. 297 Italian adult participants completed an online survey during the pandemic time frame which included self-report questionnaires that measured the variables of interest. Group differences pertaining to prior vaccination behavior in scores of conspiracy beliefs about vaccines and vaccine hesitancy were explored. A negative association was found between years of education and both vaccine hesitancy and conspiracy beliefs about vaccines, and a positive one with epistemic trust; higher education may protect the individual from misinformation and help in discerning between real knowledge and fake or imprecise news. A mediation model was developed between epistemic stance, vaccine conspiracy belief, vaccine hesitancy, and COVID-19-specific variables: the affective dimension (fear of contagion) and the behavioral one (number of vaccine doses). The model demonstrates how certain structural characteristics, such as epistemic credulity and skepticism towards vaccine benefits, may indirectly affect the number of COVID-19 vaccine doses taken through fear of contracting the virus. The results support the value of exploring vaccine hesitancy and conspiracy beliefs in relation to epistemic trust dimensions, specifically in the post-pandemic era, and are discussed in light of the recent literature.

Bincoletto, A.f., Nimbi, F.m., Protopapa, G., Lingiardi, V., Giovanardi, G. (2024). Is Epistemic Trust relevant for Vaccine Hesitancy? A study during the Covid-19 pandemic,La fiducia epistemica {\`e} rilevante per l?esitanza vaccinale? Uno studio condotto durante la pandemia Covid-19. PSICOLOGIA DELLA SALUTE(1), 46-66 [10.3280/PDS2024-001003].

Is Epistemic Trust relevant for Vaccine Hesitancy? A study during the Covid-19 pandemic,La fiducia epistemica {\`e} rilevante per l?esitanza vaccinale? Uno studio condotto durante la pandemia Covid-19

Protopapa, G.;
2024-01-01

Abstract

Vaccine hesitancy and conspiracy beliefs are social issues of growing concern which have arisen particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to investigate the multifaceted relationship between a hesitant attitude towards vaccination, conspiracy thinking, fear of infection, and the dimensions of epistemic trust, mistrust, and credulity. 297 Italian adult participants completed an online survey during the pandemic time frame which included self-report questionnaires that measured the variables of interest. Group differences pertaining to prior vaccination behavior in scores of conspiracy beliefs about vaccines and vaccine hesitancy were explored. A negative association was found between years of education and both vaccine hesitancy and conspiracy beliefs about vaccines, and a positive one with epistemic trust; higher education may protect the individual from misinformation and help in discerning between real knowledge and fake or imprecise news. A mediation model was developed between epistemic stance, vaccine conspiracy belief, vaccine hesitancy, and COVID-19-specific variables: the affective dimension (fear of contagion) and the behavioral one (number of vaccine doses). The model demonstrates how certain structural characteristics, such as epistemic credulity and skepticism towards vaccine benefits, may indirectly affect the number of COVID-19 vaccine doses taken through fear of contracting the virus. The results support the value of exploring vaccine hesitancy and conspiracy beliefs in relation to epistemic trust dimensions, specifically in the post-pandemic era, and are discussed in light of the recent literature.
2024
Pubblicato
Rilevanza nazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore PSIC-03/A - Psicologia sociale
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
conspiracy beliefs
covid-19
epistemic credulity
epistemic mistrust
epistemic trust
vaccine hesitancy
Bincoletto, A.f., Nimbi, F.m., Protopapa, G., Lingiardi, V., Giovanardi, G. (2024). Is Epistemic Trust relevant for Vaccine Hesitancy? A study during the Covid-19 pandemic,La fiducia epistemica {\`e} rilevante per l?esitanza vaccinale? Uno studio condotto durante la pandemia Covid-19. PSICOLOGIA DELLA SALUTE(1), 46-66 [10.3280/PDS2024-001003].
Bincoletto, Af; Nimbi, Fm; Protopapa, G; Lingiardi, V; Giovanardi, G
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/432427
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