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](https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/8552cc300980d2aaaa1d90c943048d48.png 480w,https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/8552cc300980d2aaaa1d90c943048d48.png 960w,https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/8552cc300980d2aaaa1d90c943048d48.png 1920w,https://asset.jmir.pub/assets/8552cc300980d2aaaa1d90c943048d48.png 2500w)
Journals
- 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
- 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
- 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
- Viswanath K, Lee E, Dryer E. Communication inequalities and incomplete data hinder understanding of how social media affect vaccine uptake. BMJ 2024:e076478 View
- 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