Published on in Vol 24, No 11 (2022): November

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/37559, first published .
Countering Antivax Misinformation via Social Media: Message-Testing Randomized Experiment for Human Papillomavirus Vaccination Uptake

Countering Antivax Misinformation via Social Media: Message-Testing Randomized Experiment for Human Papillomavirus Vaccination Uptake

Countering Antivax Misinformation via Social Media: Message-Testing Randomized Experiment for Human Papillomavirus Vaccination Uptake

Journals

  1. Gray A, Fisher C. Factors associated with HPV vaccine acceptability and hesitancy among Black mothers with young daughters in the United States. Frontiers in Public Health 2023;11 View
  2. Maddah M, Esmaeilzadeh P, Mirzaei T. An Experimental Study to Examine Relationships Between IT Identity and Users’ Post-Adoption Behaviors for Different Types of Health Applications. Information Systems Management 2024;41(3):238 View
  3. Hansen R, Baiju N, Gabarron E. Social Media as an Effective Provider of Quality-Assured and Accurate Information to Increase Vaccine Rates: Systematic Review. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2023;25:e50276 View
  4. Viswanath K, Lee E, Dryer E. Communication inequalities and incomplete data hinder understanding of how social media affect vaccine uptake. BMJ 2024:e076478 View
  5. Adebola A, Charis E, Tristan N, Melinda I. Content validation of a Facebook HPV vaccination promotion intervention (#HPVvaxtalks) created for young Black adults (18–26 years old). Public Health Nursing 2024 View