Search
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Mini-Conference
Browse By Division
Browse By Session or Event Type
Browse Sessions by Fields of Interest
Browse Papers by Fields of Interest
Search Tips
Conference
Location
About APSA
Personal Schedule
Change Preferences / Time Zone
Sign In
X (Twitter)
Session Submission Type: Created Panel
This panel includes three papers that look at the effectiveness of common health messaging on vaccination uptake, the impact of political ideology on vaccination attitudes and behaviors, and how public health crises may undermine the public’s trust toward experts.
Assessing the Effectiveness of Common Health Messaging Tactics on Vaccine Uptake - Matt Motta, Boston University School of Public Health; Dominik Andrzej Stecula, The Ohio State University; Kristin Kay Lunz Trujillo, University of South Carolina; Yotam Ophir, University at Buffalo; Dror Walter, Georgia State University; Timothy Herbert Callaghan, Boston University
The Impact of Political Ideology on Vaccination Behavior - Dror Walter, Georgia State University; Yotam Ophir, University at Buffalo; Kathleen Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania; Patrick Jamieson, University of Pennsylvania
Rebuild Pandemic Preparedness within Society through Public-Expert Dynamics - Yuxi Zhang, University of Oxford; Yan Wang, University of Manchester