The effect of framing and communicating COVID-19 vaccine side-effect risks on vaccine intentions for adults in the UK and the USA: A structured summary of a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Sep 7, 2021Trials

How presenting COVID-19 vaccine side-effect risks influences vaccine intentions in UK and US adults

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Abstract

A total of 12,000 participants will be randomized to evaluate how different ways of presenting COVID-19 vaccine side-effect risks may influence vaccine intentions.

  • The study examines the impact of three dimensions of risk communication on individuals' willingness to take a hypothetical COVID-19 vaccine.
  • Framing side-effect risks with qualitative labels may affect perceptions of vaccine safety.
  • Comparing vaccine side-effect risks to other mortality causes could influence individuals' willingness to be vaccinated.
  • The method of presenting comparison risks, whether absolute or relative, may also impact vaccine intentions.
  • A subset of participants will receive a status quo framing mimicking early media communication to assess its potential negative effects.

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Key numbers

12000
Total Participants
Total number of individuals to be randomized across both countries.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research outlines a randomized controlled trial protocol examining how different framings of COVID-19 vaccine side-effect risks influence vaccine intentions in adults from the UK and USA.
  • The study will assess the impact of qualitative risk labels, comparative mortality risks, and the presentation format of these risks on individuals' willingness to receive a hypothetical COVID-19 vaccine.
  • Participants will be randomly assigned to different framing conditions to evaluate how these variations affect their perceptions of vaccine safety and their likelihood of vaccination.

Essence

  • The study aims to evaluate how framing COVID-19 vaccine side-effect risks affects individuals' intentions to get vaccinated. It will explore various communication strategies to determine their influence on perceived safety and willingness to vaccinate.

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