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Information delivered by a chatbot has a positive impact on COVID-19 vaccines attitudes and intentions. release_wq54ig6qafh25inebvmcy6fswm

by Sacha Altay, Anne-Sophie Hacquin, Coralie Chevallier, Hugo Mercier

Published in Journal of experimental psychology. Applied by American Psychological Association (APA).

2021  

Abstract

The Coronavirus disease; COVID-19 vaccines will not end the pandemic if they stay in freezers. In many countries, such as France, COVID-19 vaccines hesitancy is high. It is crucial that governments make it as easy as possible for people who want to be vaccinated to do so, but also that they devise communication strategies to address the concerns of vaccine hesitant individuals. We introduce and test on 701 French participants a novel messaging strategy: A chatbot that answers people's questions about COVID-19 vaccines. We find that interacting with this chatbot for a few minutes significantly increases people's intentions to get vaccinated (ß = 0.12) and has a positive impact on their attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination (ß = 0.23). Our results suggest that a properly scripted and regularly updated chatbot could offer a powerful resource to help fight hesitancy toward COVID-19 vaccines. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2021-10-28
Language   en ?
DOI  10.1037/xap0000400
PubMed  34726454
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ISSN-L:  1076-898X
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