4.5 Article

Factors influencing Covid-19 vaccine acceptance across subgroups in the United States: Evidence from a conjoint experiment

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 39, Issue 24, Pages 3250-3258

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.04.044

Keywords

Covid-19; Public opinion; Vaccine hesitancy; Conjoint experiment; Heterogenous effects

Funding

  1. Atkinson Center for Sustainability at Cornell University

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Research shows that different subgroups have varying levels of acceptance towards vaccine attributes, for example, white individuals prioritize vaccine efficacy, while older adults and women have stronger negative reactions to vaccines authorized under emergency use. Democrats are more sensitive to vaccine efficacy, and different groups have different levels of acceptance towards vaccines. Personal vaccination history, attitudes towards vaccine safety, and contact with severe Covid-19 cases all influence vaccination hesitancy within different subgroups.
Public health officials warn that the greatest barrier to widespread vaccination against Covid-19 will not be scientific or technical, but the considerable public hesitancy to take a novel vaccine. Understanding the factors that influence vaccine acceptance is critical to informing public health campaigns aiming to combat public fears and ensure broad uptake. Employing a conjoint experiment embedded on an online survey of almost 2,000 adult Americans, we show that the effects of seven vaccine attributes on subjects' willingness to vaccinate vary significantly across subgroups. Vaccine efficacy was significantly more influential on vaccine acceptance among whites than among Blacks, while bringing a vaccine to market under a Food and Drug Administration Emergency Use Authorization had a stronger adverse effect on willingness to vaccinate among older Americans and women. Democrats were more sensitive to vaccine efficacy than Republicans, and both groups responded differently to various endorsements of the vaccine. We also explored whether past flu vaccination history, attitudes toward general vaccine safety, and personal contact with severe cases of Covid-19 can explain variation in group vaccination hesitancy. Many subgroups that exhibit the greatest Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy did not report significantly lower frequencies of flu vaccination. Several groups that exhibited greater Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy also reported greater concerns about vaccine safety generally, but others did not. Finally, subgroup variation in reported personal contact with severe cases of Covid-19 did not strongly match subgroup variation in vaccine acceptance. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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