Published on in Vol 7 (2023)

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/43628, first published .
Assessing How Risk Communication Surveillance Prompts COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance Among Internet Users by Applying the Situational Theory of Problem Solving: Cross-Sectional Study

Assessing How Risk Communication Surveillance Prompts COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance Among Internet Users by Applying the Situational Theory of Problem Solving: Cross-Sectional Study

Assessing How Risk Communication Surveillance Prompts COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance Among Internet Users by Applying the Situational Theory of Problem Solving: Cross-Sectional Study

Journals

  1. Ma M, Raza S, Yousaf M, Zaman U, Jin Q. Investigating the Psychological, Social, Cultural, and Religious Predictors of COVID-19 Vaccine Uptake Intention in Digital Age: A Media Dependency Theory Perspective. Vaccines 2023;11(8):1338 View
  2. Cheng Y. Navigating vaccine misinformation: a study on users’ motivations, active communicative action and anti-misinformation behavior via chatbots. Online Information Review 2025;49(3):643 View
  3. Ni L, Dai Y, Pan M. I See the Problem, Why Don’t You? Examining Problem Irrecognition through the Context of COVID-19. Journal of Public Relations Research 2025;37(3):297 View
  4. Raza S, Norin U, Ogadimma E, Zaman U, Shah A, Khan S, Alkahtani H, Alkhowaiter M, ullah khan S. Catenation between mHealth application advertisements and cardiovascular diseases: moderation of artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled internet of things, digital divide, and individual trust. BMC Public Health 2025;25(1) View
  5. Dam L, Borsai Basaran A. Societal perceptions of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy: strategic communicative action in problem solving. Journal of Communication Management 2025 View