Publication:
Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy in Turkey: Conspiracy beliefs, fear and stress

Thumbnail Image

Date

2023-01-01

Authors

AYDEMİR DEV, MİNE
Aydemir-Dev, Mine
Barca, Onur
Bayram-Arli, Nuran

Authors

Bozkurt, Veysel

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Corvinus Univ Budapest, Doctoral Sch Sociology

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

The aim of this study is to examine factors associated with COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. An online survey was conducted to collect the data to be evaluated. The survey included demographic questions and four scales: vaccine hesitancy, fear of COVID-19, stress, and vaccine conspiracy beliefs. Four hundred and ninety-six people answered the survey in Turkey. A conceptual model was established and estimated with a structural equation model to explore the relationships. The findings identified a statistically significant direct effect on vaccine hesitancy of conspiracy beliefs, fear, and stress. Accordingly, it was concluded that individuals with a firm belief in vaccine conspiracies, high stress levels, and low fear of COVID-19 had high levels of vaccine hesitancy. This article suggests the importance of public access to accurate information and low stress levels.

Description

Keywords

Covid-19, Vaccine hesitancy, Vaccine conspiracy beliefs, Fear, Stress, Turkey, Social sciences, Sociology

Citation

Collections

3

Views

3

Downloads

Search on Google Scholar