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      Exploring and Promoting Prosocial Vaccination: A Cross-Cultural Experiment on Vaccination of Health Care Personnel

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          Abstract

          Influenza vaccination for health care personnel (HCP) is recommended particularly because it indirectly protects patients from contracting the disease. Vaccinating can therefore be interpreted as a prosocial act. However, HCP vaccination rates are often far too low to prevent nosocomial infections. Effective interventions are needed to increase HCP's influenza vaccine uptake. Here we devise a novel tool to experimentally test interventions that aim at increasing prosocially motivated vaccine uptake under controlled conditions. We conducted a large-scale and cross-cultural experiment with participants from countries with either a collectivistic (South Korea) or an individualistic (USA) cultural background. Results showed that prosocially motivated vaccination was more likely in South Korea compared to the US, mediated by a greater perception of vaccination as a social act. However, changing the default of vaccination, such that participants had to opt out rather than to opt in, increased vaccine uptake in the US and therefore compensated for the lower level of prosocial vaccination. In sum, the present study provides both a novel method to investigate HCP influenza vaccination behavior and interventions to increase their vaccine uptake.

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          Most cited references42

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          Converging measurement of horizontal and vertical individualism and collectivism.

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            Rethinking individualism and collectivism: evaluation of theoretical assumptions and meta-analyses.

            Are Americans more individualistic and less collectivistic than members of other groups? The authors summarize plausible psychological implications of individualism-collectivism (IND-COL), meta-analyze cross-national and within-United States IND-COL differences, and review evidence for effects of IND-COL on self-concept, well-being, cognition, and relationality. European Americans were found to be both more individualistic-valuing personal independence more-and less collectivistic-feeling duty to in-groups less-than others. However, European Americans were not more individualistic than African Americans, or Latinos, and not less collectivistic than Japanese or Koreans. Among Asians, only Chinese showed large effects, being both less individualistic and more collectivistic. Moderate IND-COL effects were found on self-concept and relationality, and large effects were found on attribution and cognitive style.
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              Social Dilemmas: The Anatomy of Cooperation

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biomed Res Int
                Biomed Res Int
                BMRI
                BioMed Research International
                Hindawi Publishing Corporation
                2314-6133
                2314-6141
                2016
                20 September 2016
                : 2016
                : 6870984
                Affiliations
                1School of Business and Economics, RWTH Aachen University, Templergraben 64, 52062 Aachen, Germany
                2Center for Empirical Research in Economics and Behavioral Sciences (CEREB) and Department of Psychology, University of Erfurt, Nordhäuser Str. 63, 99089 Erfurt, Germany
                Author notes

                Academic Editor: Niyi Awofeso

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6806-0374
                Article
                10.1155/2016/6870984
                5048021
                27725940
                411c6f0b-7e99-48e1-9a6d-f3fd423938b4
                Copyright © 2016 Robert Böhm et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 3 June 2016
                : 18 August 2016
                Funding
                Funded by: Asia Pacific Alliance for the Control of Influenza
                Funded by: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
                Categories
                Research Article

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