Willingness to Receive COVID-19 Booster Vaccine: Associations between Green-Pass, Social Media Information, Anti-Vax Beliefs, and Emotional Balance
| Author | De Giorgio, Andrea | 
| Author | Kuvačić, Goran | 
| Author | Maleš, Dražen | 
| Author | Vecchio, Ignazio | 
| Author | Tornali, Cristina | 
| Author | Ishac, Wadih | 
| Author | Ramaci, Tiziana | 
| Author | Barattucci, Massimiliano | 
| Author | Milavić, Boris | 
| Available date | 2025-10-22T10:48:07Z | 
| Publication Date | 2022-03-21 | 
| Publication Name | Vaccines | 
| Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10030481 | 
| Citation | De Giorgio, A., Kuvačić, G., Maleš, D., Vecchio, I., Tornali, C., Ishac, W., ... & Milavić, B. (2022). Willingness to receive COVID-19 booster vaccine: associations between green-pass, social media information, anti-vax beliefs, and emotional balance. Vaccines, 10(3), 481. | 
| Abstract | The aims of the present investigation were (i) to determine psychological relapses of COVID-19 booster vaccine; (ii) to identify the determining factors affecting willingness to receive COVID-19 vaccine; and (iii) to study the relationship among emotional characteristics (anxiety, stress, depression, optimism), social media information, and the mandatory political choices (i.e., green-pass) in Croatian people. A cross-sectional online survey was conducted for 1003 participants (median age: 40 years) from Croatia during December 2021. Results showed a significant association between vaccinated and unvaccinated participants in all sociodemographic variables, except for gender (p = 0.905). For psychological variables, significant differences were found only for levels of optimism (p < 0.001). People with a postgraduate degree (OR: 2.25, [1.14–4.46], p = 0.020) and PhD (OR: 1.97, [95% CI: 1.01–3.52], p = 0.021) had higher odds of being vaccinated than participants with high school diplomas. Additionally, participants seeking information on TV and radio (OR: 2.35, [1.71–3.23], p < 0.001) or from general practitioner (OR: 2.53, [1.78–3.61], p < 0.001) had higher odds of being vaccinated. Conversely, participants seeking information on social networks (OR: 0.36, [0.27–0.49], p < 0.001), general internet/blogs forums (OR: 0.34, [0.22–0.52], p < 0.001), and from friends or acquaintances (OR: 0.66, [0.48–0.91], p = 0.011) had lower odds of being vaccinated. Additionally, results showed that information policies have failed to fully convince the population to vaccinate and that depression (p = 0.491), anxiety (p = 0.220), and stress (p = 0.521) were not determining factors leading to the decision to receive COVID-19 vaccine. Most of the vaccinated participants perceived the green-pass as potentially useful. In contrast, most unvaccinated participants believed that the green-pass is a form of discrimination and not useful (88%). Further and broader research into possible reasons for continuing or undertaking vaccination is needed. It is recommended to introduce a measure of conformism that represents a change of attitude, belief, or behavior in a narrower sense. | 
| Language | en | 
| Publisher | Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI) | 
| Subject | anti-vax beliefs booster COVID-19 disease vaccine hesitancy willingness | 
| Type | Article | 
| Issue Number | 3 | 
| Volume Number | 10 | 
| ESSN | 2076-393X | 
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