
Vaccines, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 13(1), P. 20 - 20
Published: Dec. 29, 2024
Background: Influenza and pneumococcal vaccinations play a crucial role in disease prevention among older adults are recommended to aged 60 years over China, but the vaccination rates suboptimal. Behavioral spillover indicates that change one behavior may lead changes other related behaviors. Objective: Based on Spillover Theory, this study aimed investigate association between influenza history intention, as well mediating of negative attitudes toward general China. Method: A multi-center cross-sectional survey was conducted 1031 adults, 658 participants (median age: 65.0 ± 9.0 years) who had not received were included analysis. Correlation analysis path performed. Results: significant positive observed intention (r = 0.167, p < 0.001). In contrast, vaccination, including mistrust vaccine benefits -0.253, 0.001), worries about unforeseen future effects -0.180, concerns commercial profiteering -0.360, preference for natural immunity -0.212, 0.001) negatively associated with intention. Negative mediated (total indirect effect 0.119, 0.001, size 50.0%). Conclusion: These findings demonstrated reduce which further increase indicating history. To promote addressing is crucial.
Language: Английский