Abstract

Vaccination is considered a key factor in the sanitary resolution of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, vaccine hesitancy can undermine its diffusion with severe consequences on global health. While beliefs in conspiracy theories, mistrust in science and in policymakers, and mistrust in official information channels may also increment vaccine hesitancy, understanding their psychological causes could improve our capacity to respond to the pandemic. Thus, we designed a cross-sectional study with the aim of probing vaccine propensity in the Italian population and explored its relationship with sociodemographic and psychological variables, and with misbeliefs in COVID-19. A battery of questionnaires was administered to a sample of 374 Italian adults during the first national lockdown (April 2020). The materials included an original instrument—Beliefs in COVID-19 Inventory—and questionnaires measuring perceived stress, anxiety, death anxiety, psychological distress, psychoticism, paranoia, anger, and somatization. The exploratory factor analysis (EFA) on Beliefs in COVID-19 suggested the existence of three factors: belief in conspiracy theories, mistrust in medical information, and mistrust in medicine and science. These factors were positively correlated with female sex, age, religious beliefs, psychiatric conditions, and psychological variables, while negatively correlated with education levels. We conducted a mediation analysis by means of a structural equation model, including psychological factors as predictors, beliefs in COVID-19 scales as mediators, and vaccine propensity as an outcome. The model showed that death anxiety had a direct positive effect on the propensity to get vaccinated. It also showed that death anxiety reduced the propensity to get vaccinated through a mediated path in believing in conspiracy theories, whereas paranoia was linked to a reduction in vaccination adherence with the mediation effect of mistrust in medical science. Psychological distress reduced vaccination propensity by increasing both conspiracy beliefs and mistrust. On the other hand, anxiety increased the propensity to get vaccinated through a decrease in both belief in conspiracy theories and mistrust in science. Our results suggest that psychological dimensions are differentially related to belief in conspiracy theories, to mistrust in science, and to the propensity to get vaccinated. Based on this result, we propose an original interpretation of how conspiracy beliefs build on a paranoid and suspicious attitude. We also discuss the possible clinical implications of treatment for such pathological beliefs.

Highlights

  • Given the extent and severity of COVID-19 around the world, global population vaccination has been proposed as the key to halting the spread of the pandemic

  • We conducted a mediation model, in which we included all the factors that survived the diagnostic regression models, i.e., psychological distress, anxiety, death anxiety, and paranoia, with covariance factors of age, sex, education level, religious belief, and presence of a psychological condition. We tested this model by means of structural equation modeling, and we found that death anxiety reduced the propensity to get vaccinated through a mediated path in believing in conspiracy theories, whereas paranoia was linked to a reduction in vaccination adherence with the mediation effect of mistrust in medical science

  • In the mediation model on vaccine propensity, we showed how mistrust in medicine and science” (MMS) mediated the negative effect of distress and paranoia, while belief in conspiracy theories” (BCT) mediated the positive effect of anxiety

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Summary

Introduction

Given the extent and severity of COVID-19 around the world, global population vaccination has been proposed as the key to halting the spread of the pandemic. Global vaccination is not easy to reach as a goal: It requires a sufficient health system capacity, and efficacy strategies capable of bringing people to accept and trust in the vaccine and in those who deliver it. The scientific evidence relating to COVID-19 has been found to be so uncertain and contradictory that it has changed, even in the medium term, the social representation of scientific knowledge (Provenzi and Barello, 2020). For all these reasons, a skeptic position toward vaccination may emerge in the population. Vaccine hesitancy is a well-known phenomenon indicated by the WHO as one of the main global health threats (Sallam et al, 2021)

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