id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-283771-hh4p7cg3 Ku-Yuan, Lee How to Reduce the Latent Social Risk of Disease: The Determinants of Vaccination against Rabies in Taiwan 2014-06-04 .txt text/plain 6429 346 45 [10] argued that knowledge, especially objective knowledge, would affect attitude and enhance self-efficacy (perceived behavioral control, PBC), but they did not test the correlation between subjective knowledge and TPB. In other words, this study hypothesizes that favorable attitudes, high subjective norms, and good perceived behavioral control enhance the behavioral intention of rabies vaccination. Four sections evaluated attitudes, subjective norms, perceived behavioral control, and behavioral intention as to whether owners would take their dogs to receive the rabies vaccine injection. For this study, we used SEM to verify whether TPB can explain the intention of people to have their dogs vaccinated and whether knowledge of rabies can positively affect people's attitude and perceived behavioral control. Therefore, people who had a more positive attitude, stronger subjective norms, and more perceptive behavioral control would have stronger behavioral intention to take their dogs for vaccination against rabies. ./cache/cord-283771-hh4p7cg3.txt ./txt/cord-283771-hh4p7cg3.txt