TY - JOUR
T1 - Two-Tailed Dogs, Social Unrest and COVID-19 Vaccination
T2 - Politics, Hesitancy and Vaccine Choice in Hungary and Thailand
AU - Goodwin, Robin
AU - Luu, Lan Anh Nguyen
AU - Wiwattanapantuwong, Juthatip
AU - Kovács, Mónika
AU - Suttiwan, Panrapee
AU - Levin, Yafit
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2022/5
Y1 - 2022/5
N2 - Background: A long tradition of research has shown an association between political orientation and vaccine uptake. However, we know little about political preferences and the choice of specific vaccines. Methods: We conducted two national surveys, in Hungary (Study 1, online, n = 1130) and Thailand (Study 2, on the street survey: n = 1052), testing associations between political allegiance, trust in government, vaccine willingness, and vaccine choice. Results: In Hungary, those supporting the government or on the political right were more willing to be vaccinated, with this association strongest for government approved vaccines. These respondents were also more likely to accept Chinese and Russian vaccines and reject the Moderna vaccine. In Thailand, vaccinated respondents reported greater trust in the government, with preference for AstraZeneca associated with support for pro-government political parties and preference for Pfizer with anti-government attitudes. Conclusions: Vaccine campaigns need to recognise the role of political loyalties not only in vaccine willingness, but in vaccine choice, especially given the mixing of vaccines across doses.
AB - Background: A long tradition of research has shown an association between political orientation and vaccine uptake. However, we know little about political preferences and the choice of specific vaccines. Methods: We conducted two national surveys, in Hungary (Study 1, online, n = 1130) and Thailand (Study 2, on the street survey: n = 1052), testing associations between political allegiance, trust in government, vaccine willingness, and vaccine choice. Results: In Hungary, those supporting the government or on the political right were more willing to be vaccinated, with this association strongest for government approved vaccines. These respondents were also more likely to accept Chinese and Russian vaccines and reject the Moderna vaccine. In Thailand, vaccinated respondents reported greater trust in the government, with preference for AstraZeneca associated with support for pro-government political parties and preference for Pfizer with anti-government attitudes. Conclusions: Vaccine campaigns need to recognise the role of political loyalties not only in vaccine willingness, but in vaccine choice, especially given the mixing of vaccines across doses.
KW - Hungary
KW - Thailand
KW - culture
KW - politics
KW - vaccines
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85130707113&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/vaccines10050789
DO - 10.3390/vaccines10050789
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AN - SCOPUS:85130707113
SN - 2076-393X
VL - 10
JO - Vaccines
JF - Vaccines
IS - 5
M1 - 789
ER -