Social–contextual factors interact with masculinity to influence college men’s HPV vaccination intentions: The role of descriptive norms, prototypes, and physician gender

被引:0
作者
Laurel M. Peterson
Jennifer A. Orr
Sasha D. Rogelberg
Nils Olsen
机构
[1] Bryn Mawr College,Department of Psychology
[2] Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania,Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics
[3] Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania,The Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Nicotine Addiction
[4] The George Washington University,Department of Organizational Sciences and Communication
来源
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2022年 / 45卷
关键词
Prototype Willingness Model; Descriptive norms; Masculinity; HPV vaccine; Patient–physician interaction;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Men’s low HPV vaccination uptake and HPV-related disease incidence are public health issues; gendered social–contextual factors likely play a role. In Study 1, college men (N = 130; Mage = 19.55; white = 58.1%) reported their social cognitions (male-referent descriptive norms and prototypes), self-reliance masculinity ideology, and vaccination intentions. In Study 2, college men (N = 106; Mage = 19.32; white = 61.3%) were randomly assigned to receive HPV vaccination information from a man or woman physician-avatar. Descriptive norms and favorable prototypes (bs ≥ .337; ps ≤ .016) were associated with higher HPV vaccination intentions. Men with higher self-reliance masculinity had higher HPV vaccination intentions with a man physician and when they perceived greater vaccination among men (ps ≤ .035). Men with higher self-reliance masculinity are more sensitive to gendered social–contextual effects in HPV vaccination decision-making. Gendered social–contextual factors should be integrated into public health interventions to increase college men’s HPV vaccination uptake.
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页码:825 / 840
页数:15
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