4.4 Article

From COVID-19 Vaccination Intention to Actual Vaccine Uptake: A Longitudinal Study Among Chinese Adults After Six Months of a National Vaccination Campaign

Journal

EXPERT REVIEW OF VACCINES
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 385-395

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14760584.2022.2021076

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; vaccination intention; vaccine uptake; longitudinal study; China

Categories

Funding

  1. Peking University (PKU)
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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This study found that individuals who had prior vaccination intention were more likely to actually receive the vaccine, while a shortage of vaccine supply would reduce the likelihood of vaccination. Therefore, promotion strategies for vaccination intentions should be implemented well before the availability of the vaccine.
Background Mass COVID-19 vaccination campaigns have been launched globally, but the translation from vaccination intention to actual vaccine uptake by the public remains unknown, hindering the evaluation of present promotion strategies. Methods Six months after the national vaccination campaign in China, a longitudinal study was conducted among the Chinese adult population, whose vaccination intention has been previously surveyed, to examine the vaccine uptake, the relationship between intention and actual vaccination, and factors associated with actual vaccination behaviors with multiplelogistic models. Results Among the total 1047 participants, 81.8% (834/936) of those who had a prior COVID-19 vaccination intention before the campaign actually received the vaccine, while 61.3% (68/111) of those without a prior intention got vaccinated. Having a prior vaccination intention, believing in vaccine safety and receiving frequent recommendations from community sources were significant predictors of vaccine uptake, while the shortage of vaccine supply would reduce the likelihood of getting vaccinated. Conclusions Promotion interventions for vaccination intentions need to be launched well before the availability of the vaccine. Sustaining vaccination attitudes and intentions, reducing barriers (e.g. vaccine safety concerns, accessibility, affordability) and shaping vaccination behavior would be effective in closing the intention-action gap and motivating vaccine uptake.

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