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Citing this Article

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Published on 29.05.15 in Vol 17, No 5 (2015): May

This paper is in the following e-collection/theme issue:

Works citing "Vaccination Persuasion Online: A Qualitative Study of Two Provaccine and Two Vaccine-Skeptical Websites"

According to Crossref, the following articles are citing this article (DOI 10.2196/jmir.4153):

(note that this is only a small subset of citations)

  1. Smith N, Graham T. Mapping the anti-vaccination movement on Facebook. Information, Communication & Society 2019;22(9):1310
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  2. Yuan X, Schuchard RJ, Crooks AT. Examining Emergent Communities and Social Bots Within the Polarized Online Vaccination Debate in Twitter. Social Media + Society 2019;5(3):205630511986546
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  3. Holt D, Bouder F, Elemuwa C, Gaedicke G, Khamesipour A, Kisler B, Kochhar S, Kutalek R, Maurer W, Obermeier P, Seeber L, Trusko B, Gould S, Rath B. The importance of the patient voice in vaccination and vaccine safety—are we listening?. Clinical Microbiology and Infection 2016;22:S146
    CrossRef
  4. Deiner MS, Fathy C, Kim J, Niemeyer K, Ramirez D, Ackley SF, Liu F, Lietman TM, Porco TC. Facebook and Twitter vaccine sentiment in response to measles outbreaks. Health Informatics Journal 2019;25(3):1116
    CrossRef
  5. . Exploring the meaning of pro-vaccine activism across two countries. Social Science & Medicine 2019;222:59
    CrossRef
  6. Peretti-Watel P, Ward J, Lutaud R, Seror V. Lyme disease: Insight from social sciences. Médecine et Maladies Infectieuses 2019;49(2):133
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  7. Jones J, Gouge C, Crilley M. Design principles for health wearables. Communication Design Quarterly 2017;5(2):40
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  8. Frew PM, Chung Y, Fisher AK, Schamel J, Basket MM. Parental experiences with vaccine information statements: Implications for timing, delivery, and parent-provider immunization communication. Vaccine 2016;34(48):5840
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  9. Vivion M, Hennequin C, Verger P, Dubé E. Supporting informed decision-making about vaccination: an analysis of two official websites. Public Health 2020;178:112
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  10. Ward JK, Peretti-Watel P, Verger P. Vaccine criticism on the internet: Propositions for future research. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics 2016;:1
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  11. Groshek J, Basil M, Guo L, Parker Ward S, Farraye FA, Reich J. Media Consumption and Creation in Attitudes Toward and Knowledge of Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Web-Based Survey. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2017;19(12):e403
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  12. Douglas KM, Uscinski JE, Sutton RM, Cichocka A, Nefes T, Ang CS, Deravi F. Understanding Conspiracy Theories. Political Psychology 2019;40(S1):3
    CrossRef
  13. O'Leary ST, Narwaney KJ, Wagner NM, Kraus CR, Omer SB, Glanz JM. Efficacy of a Web-Based Intervention to Increase Uptake of Maternal Vaccines: An RCT. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 2019;57(4):e125
    CrossRef
  14. Wang Y, McKee M, Torbica A, Stuckler D. Systematic Literature Review on the Spread of Health-related Misinformation on Social Media. Social Science & Medicine 2019;240:112552
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  15. Melovic B, Jaksic Stojanovic A, Vulic TB, Dudic B, Benova E. The Impact of Online Media on Parents’ Attitudes toward Vaccination of Children—Social Marketing and Public Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2020;17(16):5816
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  16. Lander D, Ragusa AT. ‘A rational solution to a different problem’; understanding the verisimilitude of anti-vaccination communication. Communication Research and Practice 2021;7(1):89
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  17. Cole J, Watkins C, Kleine D. Health Advice from Internet Discussion Forums: How Bad Is Dangerous?. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2016;18(1):e4
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  18. Meloncon L, Frost EA. Special issue introduction: Charting an emerging field. Communication Design Quarterly 2015;3(4):7
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  19. Trevors G, Kendeou P. The Effects of Positive and Negative Emotions on Knowledge Revision. SSRN Electronic Journal 2018;
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  20. Shoup JA, Narwaney KJ, Wagner NM, Kraus CR, Gleason KS, Albright K, Glanz JM. Social Media Vaccine Websites: A Comparative Analysis of Public and Moderated Websites. Health Education & Behavior 2019;46(3):454
    CrossRef
  21. Abdi I, Murphy B, Seale H. Evaluating the health literacy demand and cultural appropriateness of online immunisation information available to refugee and migrant communities in Australia. Vaccine 2020;38(41):6410
    CrossRef
  22. Steffens MS, Dunn AG, Wiley KE, Leask J. How organisations promoting vaccination respond to misinformation on social media: a qualitative investigation. BMC Public Health 2019;19(1)
    CrossRef
  23. Smaldone F, Ippolito A, Ruberto M. The shadows know me: Exploring the dark side of social media in the healthcare field. European Management Journal 2020;38(1):19
    CrossRef
  24. Okuhara T, Ishikawa H, Okada H, Ueno H, Kiuchi T. Dual-process theories to counter the anti-vaccination movement. Preventive Medicine Reports 2020;20:101205
    CrossRef
  25. Tangherlini TR, Roychowdhury V, Glenn B, Crespi CM, Bandari R, Wadia A, Falahi M, Ebrahimzadeh E, Bastani R. “Mommy Blogs” and the Vaccination Exemption Narrative: Results From A Machine-Learning Approach for Story Aggregation on Parenting Social Media Sites. JMIR Public Health and Surveillance 2016;2(2):e166
    CrossRef
  26. Gallagher J, Lawrence HY. Rhetorical Appeals and Tactics in New York Times Comments About Vaccines: Qualitative Analysis. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2020;22(12):e19504
    CrossRef
  27. Panchal R, Jack A. The contagiousness of memes: containing the spread of COVID-19 conspiracy theories in a forensic psychiatric hospital. BJPsych Bulletin 2022;46(1):36
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  28. Lobo EH, Frølich A, Kensing F, Rasmussen LJ, Livingston PM, Grundy J, Abdelrazek M. mHealth applications to support caregiver needs and engagement during stroke recovery: A content review. Research in Nursing & Health 2021;44(1):213
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  29. Bonnevie E, Goldbarg J, Gallegos-Jeffrey AK, Rosenberg SD, Wartella E, Smyser J. Content Themes and Influential Voices Within Vaccine Opposition on Twitter, 2019. American Journal of Public Health 2020;110(S3):S326
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  30. Bonnevie E, Goldbarg J, Gallegos-Jeffry AK, Rosenberg SD, Wartella E, Smyser J. Temas de contenido y voces influyentes dentro de la oposición a las vacunas en Twitter, 2019. Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública 2021;45:1
    CrossRef
  31. Lama Y, Nan X, Quinn SC. General and health-related social media use among adults with children in the household: Findings from a national survey in the United States. Patient Education and Counseling 2022;105(3):647
    CrossRef
  32. Dow BJ, Johnson AL, Wang CS, Whitson J, Menon T. The COVID‐19 pandemic and the search for structure: Social media and conspiracy theories. Social and Personality Psychology Compass 2021;15(9)
    CrossRef
  33. Elisha E, Guetzkow J, Shir-Raz Y, Ronel N. Going against the flow: Motivations of professionals with critical views on vaccination. Temida 2022;25(2):155
    CrossRef
  34. Fuss TL, Devera JL, Pierre-Joseph N, Perkins RB. Attitudes and Communication Preferences for Vaccines among Pregnant Women Receiving Care at a Safety-net Hospital. Women's Health Issues 2022;32(1):67
    CrossRef
  35. . Unofficial Vaccine Advocates: Technical Communication, Localization, and Care by COVID-19 Vaccine Trial Participants. Technical Communication Quarterly 2023;32(2):149
    CrossRef
  36. Glanz JM, Wagner NM, Narwaney KJ, Kraus CR, Shoup JA, Xu S, O’Leary ST, Omer SB, Gleason KS, Daley MF. Web-based Social Media Intervention to Increase Vaccine Acceptance: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Pediatrics 2017;140(6)
    CrossRef
  37. . Vaccination Double Bind: A Study of Pregnancy and COVID-19 Vaccine Decision-Making. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 2022;52(5):494
    CrossRef
  38. Greve HR, Rao H, Vicinanza P, Zhou EY. Online Conspiracy Groups: Micro-Bloggers, Bots, and Coronavirus Conspiracy Talk on Twitter. American Sociological Review 2022;87(6):919
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  39. Garett R, Young SD. Online misinformation and vaccine hesitancy. Translational Behavioral Medicine 2021;11(12):2194
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  40. Vignoli RG, Silva RCD, Maran MFIDA, Vitoriano MCCP. Movimento antivacina e hesitação vacinal na COVID-19: reflexões e percepções para a Ciência da Informação. Informação & Informação 2022;27(1):457
    CrossRef
  41. Lutaud R, Verger P, Peretti-Watel P, Eldin C. When the patient is making the (wrong?) diagnosis: a biographical approach to patients consulting for presumed Lyme disease. Family Practice 2022;
    CrossRef
  42. . « La vaccination, ça se discute ? » Le rapport sur la politique vaccinale, espace polyphonique inédit. Mots 2017;(114):117
    CrossRef
  43. Karafillakis E, Peretti-Watel P, Verger P, Chantler T, Larson H. ‘I trust them because my mum trusts them’: Exploring the role of trust in HPV vaccination decision-making among adolescent girls and their mothers in France. Vaccine 2022;40(8):1090
    CrossRef
  44. Schlette A, van Prooijen J, Blokland A, Thijs F. The online structure and development of posting behaviour in Dutch anti-vaccination groups on Telegram. New Media & Society 2022;:146144482211284
    CrossRef
  45. Gabis LV, Attia OL, Goldman M, Barak N, Tefera P, Shefer S, Shaham M, Lerman-Sagie T. The myth of vaccination and autism spectrum. European Journal of Paediatric Neurology 2022;36:151
    CrossRef
  46. Saini V, Liang L, Yang Y, Le HM, Wu C. The Association Between Dissemination and Characteristics of Pro-/Anti-COVID-19 Vaccine Messages on Twitter: Application of the Elaboration Likelihood Model. JMIR Infodemiology 2022;2(1):e37077
    CrossRef
  47. Peng RX, Wang RY. The infinity vaccine war: linguistic regularities and audience engagement of vaccine debate on Twitter. Online Information Review 2024;48(1):84
    CrossRef
  48. Fasce A, Schmid P, Holford DL, Bates L, Gurevych I, Lewandowsky S. A taxonomy of anti-vaccination arguments from a systematic literature review and text modelling. Nature Human Behaviour 2023;7(9):1462
    CrossRef
  49. Wolfe CR, Gao H, Wu J, Wang Y, Marroquín JE, Brace W. Written Arguments About Vaccination: Experimental Studies in the United States and China. Written Communication 2023;40(4):1218
    CrossRef
  50. Dubé E, Trottier M, Gagnon D, Bettinger JA, Greyson D, Graham J, MacDonald NE, MacDonald SE, Meyer SB, Witteman HO, Driedger SM, Amnie AG. Exploring parents’ views of the use of narratives to promote childhood vaccination online. PLOS ONE 2023;18(7):e0284107
    CrossRef
  51. . Post-Truth is Misplaced Distrust in Testimony, Not Indifference to Facts: Implications for Deliberative Remedies. Political Studies 2023;
    CrossRef
  52. Kopsco HL, Krell RK, Mather TN, Connally NP. Identifying Trusted Sources of Lyme Disease Prevention Information Among Internet Users Connected to Academic Public Health Resources: Internet-Based Survey Study. JMIR Formative Research 2023;7:e43516
    CrossRef
  53. Hiaeshutter-Rice D, Madrigal G, Ploger G, Carr S, Carbone M, Battocchio AF, Soroka S. Identity Driven Information Ecosystems. Communication Theory 2024;
    CrossRef
  54. . Breakdown of knowledge authority: semiotic analysis of an anti-vax conspiracy theory influencer on Twitter. Social Semiotics 2024;:1
    CrossRef

According to Crossref, the following books are citing this article (DOI 10.2196/jmir.4153):

  1. Song MY, Abelson J. Handbook of Research on Citizen Engagement and Public Participation in the Era of New Media. 2017. chapter 3:38
    CrossRef
  2. . Establishing and Evaluating Digital Ethos and Online Credibility. 2017. chapter 5:85
    CrossRef
  3. . Using New Media for Citizen Engagement and Participation. 2020. chapter 4:60
    CrossRef
  4. Cole AW, Salek TA. Establishing and Evaluating Digital Ethos and Online Credibility. 2017. chapter 6:104
    CrossRef
  5. Song MY, Abelson J. Healthcare Policy and Reform. 2019. chapter 2:19
    CrossRef
  6. . Communication and Health. 2022. Chapter 15:291
    CrossRef