S
Sebastian Neumann-Böhme
Researcher at Erasmus University Rotterdam
Publications - 11
Citations - 775
Sebastian Neumann-Böhme is an academic researcher from Erasmus University Rotterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Pandemic. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 5 publications receiving 329 citations.
Papers
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Once we have it, will we use it? A European survey on willingness to be vaccinated against COVID-19.
Sebastian Neumann-Böhme,Nirosha Elsem Varghese,Iryna Sabat,Pedro Pita Barros,Werner B. F. Brouwer,Job van Exel,Jonas Schreyögg,Tom Stargardt +7 more
TL;DR: In this editorial, some first insights into this willingness to be vaccinated are provided, based on a multi-country European study.
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Risk communication during COVID-19: A descriptive study on familiarity with, adherence to and trust in the WHO preventive measures.
Nirosha Elsem Varghese,Iryna Sabat,Sebastian Neumann-Böhme,Jonas Schreyögg,Tom Stargardt,Aleksandra Torbica,Job van Exel,Pedro Pita Barros,Werner B. F. Brouwer +8 more
TL;DR: The extent of familiarity and uptake of the WHO recommendations among the public during the first wave of the pandemic was investigated in a large-scale Pan-European survey covering around 7500 individuals that are representative of populations from seven European countries as mentioned in this paper.
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Blood donation in times of crisis: Early insight into the impact of COVID-19 on blood donors and their motivation to donate across European countries.
Torsten Chandler,Sebastian Neumann-Böhme,Iryna Sabat,Pedro Pita Barros,Werner B. F. Brouwer,Job van Exel,Jonas Schreyögg,Aleksandra Torbica,Tom Stargardt +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of COVID-19 on blood donors and their motivation to donate during the crisis was investigated, finding that around half of donors donated less than normal and the vast majority of donors that did donate made a special effort to do so in response to COVID19.
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Depression and anxiety in later COVID-19 waves across Europe: New evidence from the European COvid Survey (ECOS)
André Hajek,Sebastian Neumann-Böhme,Iryna Sabat,Aleksandra Torbica,Jonas Schreyögg,Pedro Pita Barros,Tom Stargardt,Hans-Helmut König +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the prevalence of probable depression and anxiety and their correlates during later stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in eight European countries, including Germany, United Kingdom, Denmark, Netherlands, France, Portugal, Italy and Spain.
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Trust me; I know what I am doing investigating the effect of choice list elicitation and domain-relevant training on preference reversals in decision making for others.
TL;DR: This paper found that preference reversals were more likely to occur for medical students, within the health domain, and for open-ended valuation questions, and that familiarity with a domain reduced the likelihood of preference reversal in that domain.