Effect of Information about COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness and Side Effects on Behavioural Intentions: Two Online Experiments
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Transparent Communication of Vaccine Risks and Benefits
1.2. Beliefs about COVID Vaccines and Vaccine Hesitancy
1.3. The Effect of COVID-19 Vaccine Communications on Intentions
1.4. Post-Vaccination Protective Behaviour Messaging and Vaccine Confidence
2. Study 1
2.1. Methods
2.1.1. Participants
2.1.2. Materials and Procedure
2.2. Results
2.2.1. Primary Outcomes
2.2.2. Secondary Outcomes
2.3. Interim Discussion
3. Study 2
3.1. Methods
3.1.1. Participants
3.1.2. Materials and Procedure
3.1.3. Analysis
3.2. Results
3.2.1. Primary Outcomes
3.2.2. Secondary Outcomes
3.3. Study 2 Discussion
4. General Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Condition | n | Content | Source | Length in Words (Incl. Tables) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Control | 412 | None | - | - |
Factbox | 409 | Tables detailing incidence of COVID-19 and side effects in the vaccine and placebo arms of a large clinical trial, both as absolute numbers and percentages. Data was presented separately for trial participants aged 18–65 and aged 65+. A separate table reported rare side effects. | Adapted from US FDA [79] briefing document | 541 |
Q&A | 417 | A Q&A format outlining the results of a clinical trial, including the absolute numbers of symptomatic COVID- 19 cases and vaccine efficacy. The text also noted several recommendations around the vaccine and known side effects with approximate frequencies, ranging from mild (e.g., pain at injection site, 1 in 10) to severe (facial swelling and facial paralysis, 1 in 1000). | European Medicines Agency [80] webpage | 708 |
Approval | 443 | An overview of the standard and expedited COVID-19 vaccine review processes, highlighting the point that regulatory assessments of COVID-19 vaccine data were undertaken during the research and development process, as opposed after. A figure depicted this visually. | European Medicines Agency [81] webpage | 624 |
Mechanism | 416 | A description of how vaccines induce immunity and in particular the mechanism by which mRNA vaccines produce antigens, noting the benefits of using mRNA, such scaling up vaccine production quickly. Two figures were included. | Extracts from US CDC [82] and British Society for Immunology [83] and a figure from Pfizer | 686 |
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Kerr, J.R.; Freeman, A.L.J.; Marteau, T.M.; van der Linden, S. Effect of Information about COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness and Side Effects on Behavioural Intentions: Two Online Experiments. Vaccines 2021, 9, 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9040379
Kerr JR, Freeman ALJ, Marteau TM, van der Linden S. Effect of Information about COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness and Side Effects on Behavioural Intentions: Two Online Experiments. Vaccines. 2021; 9(4):379. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9040379
Chicago/Turabian StyleKerr, John R., Alexandra L. J. Freeman, Theresa M. Marteau, and Sander van der Linden. 2021. "Effect of Information about COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness and Side Effects on Behavioural Intentions: Two Online Experiments" Vaccines 9, no. 4: 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9040379
APA StyleKerr, J. R., Freeman, A. L. J., Marteau, T. M., & van der Linden, S. (2021). Effect of Information about COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness and Side Effects on Behavioural Intentions: Two Online Experiments. Vaccines, 9(4), 379. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9040379