Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness

Parent approval of routine childhood vaccination is essential to sustaining children's health because high vaccination coverage rates lower vaccine-preventable diseases. Children are more susceptible to contagious diseases than adults; thus, delaying or refusing vaccination puts them at risk fo...

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Main Authors: Noor Amira Syazwani, Abd Rahman, Nur Hazirah, Hamdan, Mohd Rozaimy, Ridzuan, Ju, Soon Yew, Jamal Rizal, Razali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Social Institute of Malaysia (ISM) 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41032/1/WOULD%2BMALAYSIAN%2BYOUNG%2BPARENTS%2BGET%2BTHEIR%2BCHILDREN%2BVACCINATED.pdf
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author Noor Amira Syazwani, Abd Rahman
Nur Hazirah, Hamdan
Mohd Rozaimy, Ridzuan
Ju, Soon Yew
Jamal Rizal, Razali
author_facet Noor Amira Syazwani, Abd Rahman
Nur Hazirah, Hamdan
Mohd Rozaimy, Ridzuan
Ju, Soon Yew
Jamal Rizal, Razali
author_sort Noor Amira Syazwani, Abd Rahman
collection UMP
description Parent approval of routine childhood vaccination is essential to sustaining children's health because high vaccination coverage rates lower vaccine-preventable diseases. Children are more susceptible to contagious diseases than adults; thus, delaying or refusing vaccination puts them at risk for serious health problems. Nevertheless, the choices made by parents regarding their children's vaccination are complex and multifaceted. Many Malaysian parents are worried about vaccines due to false information from sources in the media and the internet. The media spreads these myths, which has a direct impact on parental intentions. This study explored factors associated with young parents' intention to vaccinate their children. This study employs the theory of planned behaviour (TPB), in which intentions result from attitudes, subjective norms, perceived behavioural control and added social media. A cross-sectional survey was distributed to 210 Malaysian parents between 18 and 40 years old. However, only 202 questionnaires were usable for data analysis. The data was analysed using SMART-PLS 4.0 by applying a structural equation modelling approach. Results reveal that attitude, subjective norms, and social media significantly and positively influenced the children's vaccination intention.
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spelling UMPir410322024-04-23T03:39:58Z http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41032/ Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness Noor Amira Syazwani, Abd Rahman Nur Hazirah, Hamdan Mohd Rozaimy, Ridzuan Ju, Soon Yew Jamal Rizal, Razali RA Public aspects of medicine Parent approval of routine childhood vaccination is essential to sustaining children's health because high vaccination coverage rates lower vaccine-preventable diseases. Children are more susceptible to contagious diseases than adults; thus, delaying or refusing vaccination puts them at risk for serious health problems. Nevertheless, the choices made by parents regarding their children's vaccination are complex and multifaceted. Many Malaysian parents are worried about vaccines due to false information from sources in the media and the internet. The media spreads these myths, which has a direct impact on parental intentions. This study explored factors associated with young parents' intention to vaccinate their children. This study employs the theory of planned behaviour (TPB), in which intentions result from attitudes, subjective norms, perceived behavioural control and added social media. A cross-sectional survey was distributed to 210 Malaysian parents between 18 and 40 years old. However, only 202 questionnaires were usable for data analysis. The data was analysed using SMART-PLS 4.0 by applying a structural equation modelling approach. Results reveal that attitude, subjective norms, and social media significantly and positively influenced the children's vaccination intention. Social Institute of Malaysia (ISM) 2023-12-27 Article PeerReviewed pdf en http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41032/1/WOULD%2BMALAYSIAN%2BYOUNG%2BPARENTS%2BGET%2BTHEIR%2BCHILDREN%2BVACCINATED.pdf Noor Amira Syazwani, Abd Rahman and Nur Hazirah, Hamdan and Mohd Rozaimy, Ridzuan and Ju, Soon Yew and Jamal Rizal, Razali (2023) Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness. International Journal of Social Policy and Society (IJSPS), 19. pp. 142-159. (Published) https://ijsps.ism.gov.my/IJSPS/article/view/287/210
spellingShingle RA Public aspects of medicine
Noor Amira Syazwani, Abd Rahman
Nur Hazirah, Hamdan
Mohd Rozaimy, Ridzuan
Ju, Soon Yew
Jamal Rizal, Razali
Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness
title Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness
title_full Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness
title_fullStr Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness
title_short Would Malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated? Extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness
title_sort would malaysian young parents get their children vaccinated extending the theory of planned behavior to the context of social media influence effectiveness
topic RA Public aspects of medicine
url http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41032/1/WOULD%2BMALAYSIAN%2BYOUNG%2BPARENTS%2BGET%2BTHEIR%2BCHILDREN%2BVACCINATED.pdf
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