Bleakley, AmyHennessy, MichaelMaloney, ErinYoung, Dannagal G.Crowley, JohnSilk, KamiLangbaum, Jessica B.2022-01-262022-01-262021-10-01Amy Bleakley, PhD, MPH, Michael Hennessy, PhD, MPH, Erin Maloney, PhD, Dannagal G Young, PhD, John Crowley, PhD, Kami Silk, PhD, Jessica B Langbaum, PhD, Psychosocial Determinants of COVID-19 Vaccination Intention Among White, Black, and Hispanic Adults in the US, Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 2021;, kaab091, https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaab0911532-4796https://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/30123This article has been accepted for publication in Annals of Behavioral Medicine published by Oxford University Press. The version of record is available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaab091. This article will be embargoed until 10/01/2022.Background: COVID-19 vaccine uptake is an urgent public health priority. Purpose: To identify psychosocial determinants (attitudes, normative pressure, and perceived behavioral control) of COVID-19 vaccination intentions for U.S. White, Black, and Hispanic adults, and how COVID-19 misperceptions, beliefs about the value of science, and perceived media bias relate to these determinants. Methods: Longitudinal online survey using two national samples (18–49 years old/50 years and older), each stratified by racial/ethnic group (n = 3,190). Data were collected in October/November 2020 and were weighted by race group to be representative. Results: Path analyses showed that more positive attitudes about getting vaccinated predict intention across age and racial/ethnic groups, but normative pressure is relevant among older adults only. Belief in the value of science was positively associated with most determinants across all groups, however the association of COVID-19 misperceptions and perceived media bias with the determinants varied by age group. Conclusions: Messages that emphasize attitudes toward vaccination can be targeted to all age and racial/ethnic groups, and positive attitudes are universally related to a belief in the value of science. The varying role of normative pressure poses messages design challenges to increase vaccination acceptance.en-USHealth behaviorCOVID-19 vaccineMisinformationReasoned actionIntentionPsychosocial Determinants of COVID-19 Vaccination Intention Among White, Black, and Hispanic Adults in the USArticle