Social Norms, Referent Group Specificity, and College Students’ COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions: Risk and Efficacy Perceptions as Boundary Conditions of Normative Influence

Authors

  • Jie Zhuang Assistant Professor Communication Studies Texas Christian University
  • Paul Schrodt Texas Christian Unviersity
  • Mengfei Guan The University of Oklahoma

Keywords:

social norms, risk, and efficacy perceptions, college students, COVID-19

Abstract

How social norms affect people’s decisions to enact protective behaviors when they encounter danger is both theoretically and practically meaningful. This research investigated how social norms varying in referent group specificity, perceived risk, and perceived efficacy affect college students’ COVID-19 vaccination intention. We collected data from 640 undergraduate students during March and April 2021. The results showed that social norms in different referent groups are associated uniquely with vaccination intention. We also observed two 3-way interaction effects. Personal- and community-level norms interacted with perceived risk of COVID-19 and perceived efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines to influence participants’ vaccination intention. Specifically, perceived risk attenuated the effect of personal- and community-levels of norms on vaccination intention among participants who perceived higher levels of vaccine efficacy. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Author Biographies

Jie Zhuang, Assistant Professor Communication Studies Texas Christian University

Assistant Professor Communication Studies Texas Christian University

Paul Schrodt, Texas Christian Unviersity

Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Communication Studies

Mengfei Guan, The University of Oklahoma

Assistant Professor in Health Communication

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Published

2024-01-29

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Articles