In Whom We Trust: The Effect of Trust, Subjective Norms, and Socioeconomic Status on Attitudes and COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions.

Publication date: Feb 04, 2025

As COVID-19 vaccination hesitancy remains a major public health issue, understanding the factors influencing attitudes and COVID-19 vaccination intentions is a public health priority. Applying the theory of planned behavior (TPB), this study examined the role of two forms of social trust – namely, particularized trust toward relationally close others and generalized trust toward people in general – in moderating the relationship between social norms (injunctive and descriptive) and COVID-19 vaccination attitudes and intent. In two studies (n = 235 for Study 1, n = 273 for Study 2, total N = 508), we found some support for the TPB in the context of COVID-19 vaccination, with attitudes and injunctive norms significantly predicting vaccination intention. However, perceived behavioral control was not a significant predictor of COVID-19 vaccination intention. Extending the TPB, we found that trust in others had an amplifying effect on the relationship between descriptive norms and COVID-19 vaccination attitudes. However, trust attenuated the link between injunctive norms and attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination. The implications of these findings are discussed.

Concepts Keywords
Behavioral Attitudes
Covid Covid
Socioeconomic Descriptive
Vaccination Found
Injunctive
Intention
Intentions
Norms
Public
Relationship
Social
Subjective
Tpb
Trust
Vaccination

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO role

Original Article

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