4.7 Article

Effects of Vaccine Literacy, Health Beliefs, and Flu Vaccination on Perceived Physical Health Status among Under/Graduate Students

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines11040765

Keywords

vaccine literacy; health beliefs; vaccination; perceived health status

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Physicians emphasize the importance of flu vaccination, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. Low coverage among younger groups may be due to a lack of vaccine literacy and negative perceptions towards vaccination. This study examined the relationship between flu vaccine literacy, health beliefs, and vaccination, and found that vaccine literacy directly affected health beliefs and vaccination, while susceptibility belief directly influenced perceived health status. The study underscores the need for healthcare providers and governments to improve vaccine literacy and address negative perceptions towards vaccination among younger populations, in order to increase flu vaccination rates and protect public health.
Physicians highlight that receiving the flu vaccine is critical, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic period. Younger groups' flu vaccination coverage is very low, and this tendency is potentially related to a lower level of vaccine literacy and perceptions toward vaccination. This study investigated the relationship between flu vaccine literacy, health beliefs, and flu vaccinations (benefit, barrier, severity, and susceptibility) and their impact on perceived health status controlling for socioeconomic factors. It used the Health Belief Model andHealth Literacy Skills Framework with under/graduate students (N = 382) in Ohio, U.S. Path analyses were performed to examine the causal process using SPSS and Amos 23.0. Indicators of CFI, RMSEA, SRMR, and the chi-square/df of the path models were good-acceptable. Vaccine literacy directly impacted on health beliefs and vaccination. Susceptibility belief directly influenced perceived health status. The mediation effects of health beliefs (benefit, barrier) between vaccine literacy and vaccination were confirmed. The study highlights the need for healthcare providers and governments to work together to improve flu vaccine literacy and reduce negative perceptions toward vaccination among younger populations. Educational programs and official communication channels can be used to address concerns and provide accurate information about vaccines to increase flu vaccination rates and protect public health.

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