Links between Vaccination Fear-, Anxiety-, Alexithymia-, and Type D Personality-Related Vaccination Decisions: A Network Analysis in a Multicultural Sample

Author:

Malas Olga1,Boustani Nada Mallah2ORCID,Duradoni Mirko3ORCID,Omotoso Dayo4ORCID,Avşar Asiye Şengül5ORCID,Shyroka Anastasiia6ORCID,Colombini Giulia3,Tolsá Maria Dolores7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Sociology and Social Work, University of Lleida, Avinguda de l’Estudi General, 4, 25001 Lleida, Spain

2. Faculty of Business and Management, Saint Joseph University, Mar Mikhael, Beirut 1104 2020, Lebanon

3. Department of Education, Languages, Interculture, Literatures and Psychology, University of Florence, Via di San Salvi, 12, Building 26, 50135 Florence, Italy

4. Department of Human Anatomy, Redeemer’s University, Ede 232103, Osun State, Nigeria

5. Department of Measurement and Evaluation in Education, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan University, Campus Zihni Derin, Fener Mahallesi, 53100 Rize, Turkey

6. Department of Psychology and Psychotherapy, Ukrainian Catholic University, Sventsitskogo 17, 79011 Lviv, Ukraine

7. eHealth, Research Centre, C/Cristofol de Boleda, 1-2, 25006 Lleida, Spain

Abstract

This study examines the links between vaccination status, fear of vaccination (cognitive and somatic symptoms), anxiety, alexithymia, and type D personality (negative affect and social inhibition), to propose policies to increase vaccination rates. A sample of university students (n = 2535; mean age = 20.59, SD = 2.04; male: 26.75%, female: 73.25%) from Spain, Italy, Lebanon, Nigeria, Turkey, and Ukraine completed the Vaccination Fear Scale (VFS-6), the Generalised Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7), the Perth Alexithymia Questionnaire—Short Form (PAQ-S), the Type D Scale (DS14), and also a question on vaccination status. Correlation, regression, and network analyses were applied. Cognitive symptoms of fear of vaccination and negative affect were the most significant in the correlation and regression analyses. In the network analysis, negative affect showed the highest values in all centrality indices and positive relationships with other nodes. Vaccination status showed negative relationships with fear of vaccination, alexithymia, and social inhibition. The network structure is similar between the sexes but varies between cultures and sexes within cultures. The relationship between vaccination status and cognitive symptoms of fear of vaccination was the most consistent, allowing for interventions at this level to be advised across cultures. For more specific interventions, cultural context must be considered for optimal results.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference63 articles.

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