Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines. / Böhm, Robert; Betsch, Cornelia; Litovsky, Yana; Sprengholz, Philipp; Brewer, Noel T.; Chapman, Gretchen; Leask, Julie; Loewenstein, George; Scherzer, Martha; Sunstein, Cass R.; Kirchler, Michael.

In: EClinicalMedicine, Vol. 53, 101632, 11.2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Böhm, R, Betsch, C, Litovsky, Y, Sprengholz, P, Brewer, NT, Chapman, G, Leask, J, Loewenstein, G, Scherzer, M, Sunstein, CR & Kirchler, M 2022, 'Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines', EClinicalMedicine, vol. 53, 101632. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101632

APA

Böhm, R., Betsch, C., Litovsky, Y., Sprengholz, P., Brewer, N. T., Chapman, G., Leask, J., Loewenstein, G., Scherzer, M., Sunstein, C. R., & Kirchler, M. (2022). Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines. EClinicalMedicine, 53, [101632]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101632

Vancouver

Böhm R, Betsch C, Litovsky Y, Sprengholz P, Brewer NT, Chapman G et al. Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines. EClinicalMedicine. 2022 Nov;53. 101632. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101632

Author

Böhm, Robert ; Betsch, Cornelia ; Litovsky, Yana ; Sprengholz, Philipp ; Brewer, Noel T. ; Chapman, Gretchen ; Leask, Julie ; Loewenstein, George ; Scherzer, Martha ; Sunstein, Cass R. ; Kirchler, Michael. / Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines. In: EClinicalMedicine. 2022 ; Vol. 53.

Bibtex

@article{0146f9e65c9340d781d4015f3064424f,
title = "Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines",
abstract = "SummaryBackgroundCOVID-19 booster vaccine uptake rates are behind the rate of primary vaccination in many countries. Governments and non-governmental institutions rely on a range of interventions aiming to increase booster uptake. Yet, little is known how experts and the general public evaluate these interventions.MethodsWe applied a novel crowdsourcing approach to provide rapid insights on the most promising interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines. In the first phase (December 2021), international experts (n = 78 from 17 countries) proposed 46 unique interventions. To reduce noise and potential bias, in the second phase (January 2022), experts (n = 307 from 34 countries) and representative general population samples from the UK (n = 299) and the US (n = 300) rated the proposed interventions on several evaluation criteria, including effectiveness and acceptability, on a 5-point Likert-type scale.FindingsSanctions were evaluated as potentially most effective but least accepted. Evaluations by expert and general population samples were considerably aligned. Interventions that received the most positive evaluations regarding both effectiveness and acceptability across evaluation groups were: a day off work after getting vaccinated, financial incentives, tax benefits, promotional campaigns, and mobile vaccination teams.InterpretationThe results provide useful insights to help governmental and non-governmental institutions in their decisions about which interventions to implement. Additionally, the applied crowdsourcing method may be used in future studies to retrieve rapid insights on the comparative evaluation of (health) policies.FundingThis study received funding from the Austrian Science Fund (SFB F63) and the University of Vienna.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Booster vaccination, CoVID-19, Behavioural interventions, Crowdsourcing",
author = "Robert B{\"o}hm and Cornelia Betsch and Yana Litovsky and Philipp Sprengholz and Brewer, {Noel T.} and Gretchen Chapman and Julie Leask and George Loewenstein and Martha Scherzer and Sunstein, {Cass R.} and Michael Kirchler",
year = "2022",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101632",
language = "English",
volume = "53",
journal = "EClinicalMedicine",
issn = "2589-5370",
publisher = "The Lancet Publishing Group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Crowdsourcing interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines

AU - Böhm, Robert

AU - Betsch, Cornelia

AU - Litovsky, Yana

AU - Sprengholz, Philipp

AU - Brewer, Noel T.

AU - Chapman, Gretchen

AU - Leask, Julie

AU - Loewenstein, George

AU - Scherzer, Martha

AU - Sunstein, Cass R.

AU - Kirchler, Michael

PY - 2022/11

Y1 - 2022/11

N2 - SummaryBackgroundCOVID-19 booster vaccine uptake rates are behind the rate of primary vaccination in many countries. Governments and non-governmental institutions rely on a range of interventions aiming to increase booster uptake. Yet, little is known how experts and the general public evaluate these interventions.MethodsWe applied a novel crowdsourcing approach to provide rapid insights on the most promising interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines. In the first phase (December 2021), international experts (n = 78 from 17 countries) proposed 46 unique interventions. To reduce noise and potential bias, in the second phase (January 2022), experts (n = 307 from 34 countries) and representative general population samples from the UK (n = 299) and the US (n = 300) rated the proposed interventions on several evaluation criteria, including effectiveness and acceptability, on a 5-point Likert-type scale.FindingsSanctions were evaluated as potentially most effective but least accepted. Evaluations by expert and general population samples were considerably aligned. Interventions that received the most positive evaluations regarding both effectiveness and acceptability across evaluation groups were: a day off work after getting vaccinated, financial incentives, tax benefits, promotional campaigns, and mobile vaccination teams.InterpretationThe results provide useful insights to help governmental and non-governmental institutions in their decisions about which interventions to implement. Additionally, the applied crowdsourcing method may be used in future studies to retrieve rapid insights on the comparative evaluation of (health) policies.FundingThis study received funding from the Austrian Science Fund (SFB F63) and the University of Vienna.

AB - SummaryBackgroundCOVID-19 booster vaccine uptake rates are behind the rate of primary vaccination in many countries. Governments and non-governmental institutions rely on a range of interventions aiming to increase booster uptake. Yet, little is known how experts and the general public evaluate these interventions.MethodsWe applied a novel crowdsourcing approach to provide rapid insights on the most promising interventions to promote uptake of COVID-19 booster vaccines. In the first phase (December 2021), international experts (n = 78 from 17 countries) proposed 46 unique interventions. To reduce noise and potential bias, in the second phase (January 2022), experts (n = 307 from 34 countries) and representative general population samples from the UK (n = 299) and the US (n = 300) rated the proposed interventions on several evaluation criteria, including effectiveness and acceptability, on a 5-point Likert-type scale.FindingsSanctions were evaluated as potentially most effective but least accepted. Evaluations by expert and general population samples were considerably aligned. Interventions that received the most positive evaluations regarding both effectiveness and acceptability across evaluation groups were: a day off work after getting vaccinated, financial incentives, tax benefits, promotional campaigns, and mobile vaccination teams.InterpretationThe results provide useful insights to help governmental and non-governmental institutions in their decisions about which interventions to implement. Additionally, the applied crowdsourcing method may be used in future studies to retrieve rapid insights on the comparative evaluation of (health) policies.FundingThis study received funding from the Austrian Science Fund (SFB F63) and the University of Vienna.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Booster vaccination

KW - CoVID-19

KW - Behavioural interventions

KW - Crowdsourcing

U2 - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101632

DO - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101632

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36090456

VL - 53

JO - EClinicalMedicine

JF - EClinicalMedicine

SN - 2589-5370

M1 - 101632

ER -

ID: 319411242