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AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ

Year 2021, Volume: 7 Issue: 2, 377 - 390, 31.08.2021

Abstract

Aşı tereddütleri dünya çapında artmaktadır ve şu anda halk sağlığı alanında en önemli sorunlardan biridir. Birçok ülkede aşı tereddütleri, toplum bağışıklığına ulaşmanın önünde önemli engeller oluşturmaktadır. Sosyal medya ve diğer çevrimiçi platformlar aracılığıyla yayılan yanlış bilgiler, halk sağlığı için büyük bir tehdit oluşturmaktadır. Bu derleme, aşı tereddütleri konusunda yanlış bilgilerin yayınlanmasında sosyal medyanın rolüne odaklanarak, aşı tereddüdünü önlemek için öneriler sunmaktadır. Bu bağlamda, sosyal medyadaki aşı tereddütlerini içeren ulusal ve uluslararası çalışmalar üzerine literatür taraması yapılmıştır.
Sonuç olarak, sosyal medya aşı tereddüdünün nedeni değildir, ancak aşı karşıtı argümanların ve bu konuda yanlış bilgilerin geniş kitlelere ulaşmasında rol oynamaktadır. Yanlış bilgilerin yayılması sağlık görevlilerinin halk sağlığıyla ilgili mücadelelerini zorlaştırmaktadır. İnsanlar sosyal medya platformlarına giderek daha fazla güvenmektedirler, bu yüzden sağlık alanında karar vericiler aşılamayı teşvik etmek için çevrimiçi sosyal araçlar kullanılabilirler. Sağlık politikacıları, toplumun aşılamayı kabul etmesi için aşı tereddütlerini ele almalı ve aşı okuryazarlığı oluşturma konusunda çalışmalar yapmalıdırlar.

References

  • Alsubaie, S. S., Gosadi, I. M., Alsaadi, B.M., Albacker, N. B., Bawazir, M. A., Bin-Daud, N., et.al. (2019). Vaccine hesitancy among Saudi parents and its determinants. Result from the WHO SAGE working group on vaccine hesitancy survey tool. Saudi Med J, 40(12), 1242–50.
  • Aygün, E. ve Tortop, H. S. (2020). Ebeveynlerin Aşı Tereddüt Düzeylerinin ve Karşıtlık Nedenlerinin İncelenmesi. JCP, 18:(3), 300-316.
  • Azap, A. (2018). Aşı Karşıtlığının Toplumsal Sonuçları. Toplum ve Hekim, 33(3), 217-219.
  • Basch, C. H., Zybert, P., Reeves, R. and Basch, C. E. (2017). What do popular YouTube TM videos say about vaccines? Child Care Health Dev, 43(4), 499.
  • Basch, C. H. and MacLean, S. A. (2019). A content analysis of HPV related posts on Instagram. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 15(7–8), 1476–78.
  • Biasio, L. R., Carducci, A., Fara, G. M., Giammanco, G. and Lopalco, P. (2018). Health literacy, emotionality, scientific evidence elements of an effective communication in public health. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 14 (6), 1515-1516.
  • Biasio, L. R. (2016). Vaccine hesitancy and health literacy. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 13(3), 701–2.
  • Blankenship, E. B., Goff, M. E., Yin, J., Tse, Z. TH., Fu, K. W., Liang, H., et al. (2018). Sentiment, contents, and retweets: a study of two vaccine-related twitter datasets. Perm J, 22, 17–138.
  • Centers for Disease Control. (2021, Ocak 10). Ten Great Public Health Achievements United States, 2001–2010. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6019a5.htm.
  • Chou, W. S., Oh, A. and Klein, WM. P. (2018). Addressing Health-Related Misinformation on Social Media. JAMA, 18;320(23), 2417-2418. Downs, J. S., De Bruin, W. B. and Fischhoff, B. (2008). Parents’ vaccination comprehension and decisions. Vaccine, 26, 1595–1607.
  • Filiz, M. ve Kaya, M. (2019). Aşı Reddini/Kararsızlığını/Karşıtlığını Etkileyen Faktörleri Belirlemeye Yönelik Yapılan Çalışmaların Sistematik Derlemesi. Türk Akademik Sosyal Bilimler Araştırma Dergisi, 2(2), 1-7.
  • Fokoun, C. (2018). Strategies implemented to address vaccine hesitancy in France: A review article. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutıcs, 14(7), 1580–1590.
  • Glanz, J. M., Wagner, N. M., Narwaney, K. J., Shoup, J. A., McClure, D. L., McCormick, et al. (2013). A mixed methods study of parental vaccine decision making and parent provider trust. Academic Pediatrics, 13, 481–488.
  • Godlee, F., Smith, J., and Marcovitch, H. (2011). Wakefield’s article linking MMR vaccine and autism was fraudulent. BMJ, 342, c7452.
  • Greenwood, B. (2014). The contribution of vaccination to global health: Past, present and future. Philos Trans R Soc B Biol Sci, 369 (1645), 20130433.
  • Hacettepe University Institute of Population Studies. 2018 Turkey demographic and health survey. Ankara: Hacettepe University Institute of Population Studies, T.R. Presidency of Turkey Directorate of Strategy and Budget and TÜBİTAK; 2019.
  • Hadjipanayis, A., Van Esso, D., Del Torso, S., Dornbusch, H. J., Michailidou, K., Minicuci, N., et al. (2020). Vaccine confidence among parents: large scale study in eighteen European countries. Vaccine, 38(6),1505–12.
  • Health Policy Watch: World Leaders Tackle Vaccine Hesitancy At Global Summit. (2021, Ocak 8). https://www.healthpolicy-watch.org/world-leaders-tackle-vaccinehesitancy-at-global-summit/
  • Hernandez, R G., Hagen, L., Walker, k., O'Leary, H. And Lengacher, C. (2021). The COVID-19 vaccine social media infodemic: healthcare providers' missed dose in addressing misinformation and vaccine hesitancy. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 2;17(9):2962-2964.
  • Igoe, K. J. (2021, Ocak 8). Establishing the truth: Vaccines, social media, and the spread of misinformation. https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/ecpe/vaccines-social-media-spread-misinformation/
  • Jansen Yörük, V. A., Stollenwerk, N., Jensen, H. J., Ramsay, M. E., Edmunds, W. J. and Rhodes, C. J. (2003). Measles outbreaks in a population with declining vaccine uptake. Science, 301(5634), 804.
  • Jones, A. M., Omer, S. B., Bednarczyk, R. A., Halsey, N. A., Moulton, L. H. and Salmon, D. A. (2012). Parents’ source of vaccine information and impact on vaccine attitudes, beliefs, and nonmedical exemptions. Adv Prev Med, 2012, 932741–48.
  • Kata, A. (2012). Anti-vaccine activists, Web 2.0, and the postmodern paradigm: An overview of tactics and tropes used online by the anti-vaccination movement. Vaccine, 30, 3778–3789.
  • Lane, S., MacDonald, E. N., Marti, M. and Dumolard, L. (2018). Vaccine hesitancy around the globe: analysis of three years of WHO/UNICEF joint reporting form data-2015–2017. Vaccine, 36(26), 3861–67.
  • Larson, H. J., Jarrett, C., Eckersberger, E., Smith, D. M. D. and Paterson, P. (2014). Understanding vaccine hesitancy around vaccines and vaccination from a global perspective: a systematic review of published literature, 2007-2012. Vaccine, 32, 2150–2159.
  • Larson, H. J., Jarrett, C., Schulz, W. S., Chaudhuri, M., Zhouc, Y., Dube, E., et al. (2015). The SAGE working group on vaccine hesitancy. Measuring vaccine hesitancy: the development of a survey tool. Vaccine, 33(34), 4165–75.
  • Li, H. O., Bailey, A., Huynh, D. and Chan, J. (2020). YouTube as a source of information on COVID-19: A pandemic of misinformation? BMJ Global Health, 5(5), e002604.
  • Macdonald, N.E. and Dube, E. (2020). Promoting immunization resiliency in the digital information age. Can Commun Dis Rep, 46, 20–24.
  • MacDonald, N. E. (2015). Hesitancy SWGoV: vaccine hesitancy: definition, scope and determinants. Vaccine, 33(34), 4161–4.
  • Oehler, R. L. (2020). On measles, vaccination, social media activism and how to win back our role as our patients’ best advocates. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 70(2), 338-340.
  • Özceylan, G., Toprak, D. and Esen, E. S. (2020). Vaccine rejection and hesitation in Turkey. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 16(5), 1034-1039.
  • Pluviano, S., Watt, C. and Della Sala, S. (2017). Misinformation lingers in memory: Failure of three provaccination strategies. PLoS ONE, 12, e0181640.
  • Puri, N., Coomes, E. A. Haghbayan, H. and Gunaratne, K. (2020) Social media and vaccine hesitancy: new updates for the era of COVID-19 and globalized infectious diseases. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 16(11), 2586-2593.
  • Rolfes, M. A., Flannery, B. and Chung, J. R. (2019). Effects of influenza vaccination in the United States during the 2017–2018 influenza season. Clin Infect Dis, 69 (11),1845–53.
  • Report of the SAGE Working Group on vaccine hesitancy, SAGE, 2014. (2021, Ocak 12). http://www.who.int/immunization/sage/meetings/2014/october/1_Report_WORKIG_GROUP_vaccine_hesitancy_final.pdf
  • Shen, S. C. and Dubey, V. (2019). Addressing vaccine hesitancy: clinical guidance for primary care physicians working with parents. Can Fam Physician, 65,175–81.
  • Sudau, F., Friede, T., Grabowski, J., Koschack, J., Makedonski, P. and Himmel W. (2014). Sources of information and behavioral patterns in online health forums: Observational study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 16(1), e10.
  • The Guradian. (2021, Ocak 12). Facebook to ban anti-vaxx ads in new push against 'vaccine hoaxes'. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/mar/07/facebook-anti-vaxx-vaccine-hoax-ads.
  • Wang, Y., McKee, M., Torbica, A. and Stuckler, D. (2019). Systematic Literature Review on the Spread of Health-related Misinformation on Social Media. Social Science & Medicine, 240,112552.
  • Ward, J. K., Peretti Watel, P., Bocquier, A., Seror, V. and Verger, P. (2019). Vaccine hesitancy and coercion: all eyes on France. Nat Immunol, 20 (10), 1257–59.
  • Wilson, K. and Keelan, J. (2013). Social media and the empowering of opponents of medical technologies: The case of anti-vaccinationism. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 15, e103.
  • Witteman, H. O. and Zikmund-Fisher B. J. (2012). The defining characteristics of Web 2.0 and their potential influence in the online vaccination debate. Vaccine, 30, 3734–3740.
  • World Health Organization (2018). Assessment report of the Global Vaccine Action Plan: strategic advisory group of experts on immunization: World Health Organization.
  • World Health Organization (2021, Ocak 16): Ten threats to global health in 2019. https://www.who.int/emergencies/ten-threats-to-global-health-in-2019
  • Yang, Y. T., Broniatowski, D. A. and Reiss, D. R. (2019). Government Role in Regulating Vaccine Misinformation on Social Media Platforms. JAMA Pediatr, 173 (11), 1011-1012.
  • Yakşi, N. (2020). Aile sağlığı merkezi çalışanlarının aşı reddi konusundaki düşünceleri ve davranışlarının değerlendirilmesi. Turk J Public Health, 18(3), 143-154.
  • Yörük, S., Türkmen, H., Durgut, A. and Erbek, M. (2020). Vaccine mistrust among family healthcare professionals and vaccine hesitancy in the communities they serve in Turkey in 2019: a cross-sectional study. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 16(12), 3155-3162.

THE ROLE OF SOCIAL MEDIA IN VACCINE HESITATION

Year 2021, Volume: 7 Issue: 2, 377 - 390, 31.08.2021

Abstract

Vaccine hesitations are increasing worldwide and are currently one of the most important public health concerns. In addition, hesitation about vaccination in many countries pose important obstacles to achieving community immunity. Misinformation spread through social media has become a major threat to public health. This review focuses on the role of social media in disseminating misinformation about vaccine hesitations and offers recommendations for preventing vaccine hesitancy. Therefore, a literature review was conducted on national and international studies involving vaccine hesitations in social media.
In conclusion, social media is not the cause of vaccine hesitation, but plays a role in spreading anti-vaccine arguments and misinformation. The spread of this misinformation complicates the public health struggles of health officials. People increasingly rely on social media. In this case, online tools can be used to promote vaccination. Health politicians must work to get the public to accept vaccination and expand vaccine literacy.

References

  • Alsubaie, S. S., Gosadi, I. M., Alsaadi, B.M., Albacker, N. B., Bawazir, M. A., Bin-Daud, N., et.al. (2019). Vaccine hesitancy among Saudi parents and its determinants. Result from the WHO SAGE working group on vaccine hesitancy survey tool. Saudi Med J, 40(12), 1242–50.
  • Aygün, E. ve Tortop, H. S. (2020). Ebeveynlerin Aşı Tereddüt Düzeylerinin ve Karşıtlık Nedenlerinin İncelenmesi. JCP, 18:(3), 300-316.
  • Azap, A. (2018). Aşı Karşıtlığının Toplumsal Sonuçları. Toplum ve Hekim, 33(3), 217-219.
  • Basch, C. H., Zybert, P., Reeves, R. and Basch, C. E. (2017). What do popular YouTube TM videos say about vaccines? Child Care Health Dev, 43(4), 499.
  • Basch, C. H. and MacLean, S. A. (2019). A content analysis of HPV related posts on Instagram. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 15(7–8), 1476–78.
  • Biasio, L. R., Carducci, A., Fara, G. M., Giammanco, G. and Lopalco, P. (2018). Health literacy, emotionality, scientific evidence elements of an effective communication in public health. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 14 (6), 1515-1516.
  • Biasio, L. R. (2016). Vaccine hesitancy and health literacy. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 13(3), 701–2.
  • Blankenship, E. B., Goff, M. E., Yin, J., Tse, Z. TH., Fu, K. W., Liang, H., et al. (2018). Sentiment, contents, and retweets: a study of two vaccine-related twitter datasets. Perm J, 22, 17–138.
  • Centers for Disease Control. (2021, Ocak 10). Ten Great Public Health Achievements United States, 2001–2010. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6019a5.htm.
  • Chou, W. S., Oh, A. and Klein, WM. P. (2018). Addressing Health-Related Misinformation on Social Media. JAMA, 18;320(23), 2417-2418. Downs, J. S., De Bruin, W. B. and Fischhoff, B. (2008). Parents’ vaccination comprehension and decisions. Vaccine, 26, 1595–1607.
  • Filiz, M. ve Kaya, M. (2019). Aşı Reddini/Kararsızlığını/Karşıtlığını Etkileyen Faktörleri Belirlemeye Yönelik Yapılan Çalışmaların Sistematik Derlemesi. Türk Akademik Sosyal Bilimler Araştırma Dergisi, 2(2), 1-7.
  • Fokoun, C. (2018). Strategies implemented to address vaccine hesitancy in France: A review article. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutıcs, 14(7), 1580–1590.
  • Glanz, J. M., Wagner, N. M., Narwaney, K. J., Shoup, J. A., McClure, D. L., McCormick, et al. (2013). A mixed methods study of parental vaccine decision making and parent provider trust. Academic Pediatrics, 13, 481–488.
  • Godlee, F., Smith, J., and Marcovitch, H. (2011). Wakefield’s article linking MMR vaccine and autism was fraudulent. BMJ, 342, c7452.
  • Greenwood, B. (2014). The contribution of vaccination to global health: Past, present and future. Philos Trans R Soc B Biol Sci, 369 (1645), 20130433.
  • Hacettepe University Institute of Population Studies. 2018 Turkey demographic and health survey. Ankara: Hacettepe University Institute of Population Studies, T.R. Presidency of Turkey Directorate of Strategy and Budget and TÜBİTAK; 2019.
  • Hadjipanayis, A., Van Esso, D., Del Torso, S., Dornbusch, H. J., Michailidou, K., Minicuci, N., et al. (2020). Vaccine confidence among parents: large scale study in eighteen European countries. Vaccine, 38(6),1505–12.
  • Health Policy Watch: World Leaders Tackle Vaccine Hesitancy At Global Summit. (2021, Ocak 8). https://www.healthpolicy-watch.org/world-leaders-tackle-vaccinehesitancy-at-global-summit/
  • Hernandez, R G., Hagen, L., Walker, k., O'Leary, H. And Lengacher, C. (2021). The COVID-19 vaccine social media infodemic: healthcare providers' missed dose in addressing misinformation and vaccine hesitancy. Hum Vaccin Immunother, 2;17(9):2962-2964.
  • Igoe, K. J. (2021, Ocak 8). Establishing the truth: Vaccines, social media, and the spread of misinformation. https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/ecpe/vaccines-social-media-spread-misinformation/
  • Jansen Yörük, V. A., Stollenwerk, N., Jensen, H. J., Ramsay, M. E., Edmunds, W. J. and Rhodes, C. J. (2003). Measles outbreaks in a population with declining vaccine uptake. Science, 301(5634), 804.
  • Jones, A. M., Omer, S. B., Bednarczyk, R. A., Halsey, N. A., Moulton, L. H. and Salmon, D. A. (2012). Parents’ source of vaccine information and impact on vaccine attitudes, beliefs, and nonmedical exemptions. Adv Prev Med, 2012, 932741–48.
  • Kata, A. (2012). Anti-vaccine activists, Web 2.0, and the postmodern paradigm: An overview of tactics and tropes used online by the anti-vaccination movement. Vaccine, 30, 3778–3789.
  • Lane, S., MacDonald, E. N., Marti, M. and Dumolard, L. (2018). Vaccine hesitancy around the globe: analysis of three years of WHO/UNICEF joint reporting form data-2015–2017. Vaccine, 36(26), 3861–67.
  • Larson, H. J., Jarrett, C., Eckersberger, E., Smith, D. M. D. and Paterson, P. (2014). Understanding vaccine hesitancy around vaccines and vaccination from a global perspective: a systematic review of published literature, 2007-2012. Vaccine, 32, 2150–2159.
  • Larson, H. J., Jarrett, C., Schulz, W. S., Chaudhuri, M., Zhouc, Y., Dube, E., et al. (2015). The SAGE working group on vaccine hesitancy. Measuring vaccine hesitancy: the development of a survey tool. Vaccine, 33(34), 4165–75.
  • Li, H. O., Bailey, A., Huynh, D. and Chan, J. (2020). YouTube as a source of information on COVID-19: A pandemic of misinformation? BMJ Global Health, 5(5), e002604.
  • Macdonald, N.E. and Dube, E. (2020). Promoting immunization resiliency in the digital information age. Can Commun Dis Rep, 46, 20–24.
  • MacDonald, N. E. (2015). Hesitancy SWGoV: vaccine hesitancy: definition, scope and determinants. Vaccine, 33(34), 4161–4.
  • Oehler, R. L. (2020). On measles, vaccination, social media activism and how to win back our role as our patients’ best advocates. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 70(2), 338-340.
  • Özceylan, G., Toprak, D. and Esen, E. S. (2020). Vaccine rejection and hesitation in Turkey. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 16(5), 1034-1039.
  • Pluviano, S., Watt, C. and Della Sala, S. (2017). Misinformation lingers in memory: Failure of three provaccination strategies. PLoS ONE, 12, e0181640.
  • Puri, N., Coomes, E. A. Haghbayan, H. and Gunaratne, K. (2020) Social media and vaccine hesitancy: new updates for the era of COVID-19 and globalized infectious diseases. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 16(11), 2586-2593.
  • Rolfes, M. A., Flannery, B. and Chung, J. R. (2019). Effects of influenza vaccination in the United States during the 2017–2018 influenza season. Clin Infect Dis, 69 (11),1845–53.
  • Report of the SAGE Working Group on vaccine hesitancy, SAGE, 2014. (2021, Ocak 12). http://www.who.int/immunization/sage/meetings/2014/october/1_Report_WORKIG_GROUP_vaccine_hesitancy_final.pdf
  • Shen, S. C. and Dubey, V. (2019). Addressing vaccine hesitancy: clinical guidance for primary care physicians working with parents. Can Fam Physician, 65,175–81.
  • Sudau, F., Friede, T., Grabowski, J., Koschack, J., Makedonski, P. and Himmel W. (2014). Sources of information and behavioral patterns in online health forums: Observational study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 16(1), e10.
  • The Guradian. (2021, Ocak 12). Facebook to ban anti-vaxx ads in new push against 'vaccine hoaxes'. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/mar/07/facebook-anti-vaxx-vaccine-hoax-ads.
  • Wang, Y., McKee, M., Torbica, A. and Stuckler, D. (2019). Systematic Literature Review on the Spread of Health-related Misinformation on Social Media. Social Science & Medicine, 240,112552.
  • Ward, J. K., Peretti Watel, P., Bocquier, A., Seror, V. and Verger, P. (2019). Vaccine hesitancy and coercion: all eyes on France. Nat Immunol, 20 (10), 1257–59.
  • Wilson, K. and Keelan, J. (2013). Social media and the empowering of opponents of medical technologies: The case of anti-vaccinationism. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 15, e103.
  • Witteman, H. O. and Zikmund-Fisher B. J. (2012). The defining characteristics of Web 2.0 and their potential influence in the online vaccination debate. Vaccine, 30, 3734–3740.
  • World Health Organization (2018). Assessment report of the Global Vaccine Action Plan: strategic advisory group of experts on immunization: World Health Organization.
  • World Health Organization (2021, Ocak 16): Ten threats to global health in 2019. https://www.who.int/emergencies/ten-threats-to-global-health-in-2019
  • Yang, Y. T., Broniatowski, D. A. and Reiss, D. R. (2019). Government Role in Regulating Vaccine Misinformation on Social Media Platforms. JAMA Pediatr, 173 (11), 1011-1012.
  • Yakşi, N. (2020). Aile sağlığı merkezi çalışanlarının aşı reddi konusundaki düşünceleri ve davranışlarının değerlendirilmesi. Turk J Public Health, 18(3), 143-154.
  • Yörük, S., Türkmen, H., Durgut, A. and Erbek, M. (2020). Vaccine mistrust among family healthcare professionals and vaccine hesitancy in the communities they serve in Turkey in 2019: a cross-sectional study. Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 16(12), 3155-3162.
There are 47 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language Turkish
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Samira Etesamınıa 0000-0003-0357-2330

Kübra Bağcı Derinpınar 0000-0001-5135-6048

Publication Date August 31, 2021
Acceptance Date August 20, 2021
Published in Issue Year 2021 Volume: 7 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Etesamınıa, S., & Bağcı Derinpınar, K. (2021). AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ. Uluslararası Sağlık Yönetimi Ve Stratejileri Araştırma Dergisi, 7(2), 377-390.
AMA Etesamınıa S, Bağcı Derinpınar K. AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ. USAYSAD. August 2021;7(2):377-390.
Chicago Etesamınıa, Samira, and Kübra Bağcı Derinpınar. “AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ”. Uluslararası Sağlık Yönetimi Ve Stratejileri Araştırma Dergisi 7, no. 2 (August 2021): 377-90.
EndNote Etesamınıa S, Bağcı Derinpınar K (August 1, 2021) AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ. Uluslararası Sağlık Yönetimi ve Stratejileri Araştırma Dergisi 7 2 377–390.
IEEE S. Etesamınıa and K. Bağcı Derinpınar, “AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ”, USAYSAD, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 377–390, 2021.
ISNAD Etesamınıa, Samira - Bağcı Derinpınar, Kübra. “AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ”. Uluslararası Sağlık Yönetimi ve Stratejileri Araştırma Dergisi 7/2 (August 2021), 377-390.
JAMA Etesamınıa S, Bağcı Derinpınar K. AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ. USAYSAD. 2021;7:377–390.
MLA Etesamınıa, Samira and Kübra Bağcı Derinpınar. “AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ”. Uluslararası Sağlık Yönetimi Ve Stratejileri Araştırma Dergisi, vol. 7, no. 2, 2021, pp. 377-90.
Vancouver Etesamınıa S, Bağcı Derinpınar K. AŞI TEREDDÜTLERİNDE SOSYAL MEDYANIN ROLÜ. USAYSAD. 2021;7(2):377-90.