4.7 Article

Public Perceptions and Acceptance of COVID-19 Booster Vaccination in China: A Cross-Sectional Study

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines9121461

Keywords

booster vaccination; China; COVID-19; health belief model; vaccine

Funding

  1. Special Research Fund of Peking University (PKU) for the Prevention and Control of COVID-19
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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Public acceptance of COVID-19 booster vaccination is relatively high in China, with concerns primarily focused on vaccine safety. Factors influencing acceptance include vaccination history, perceived benefits and barriers, age, education level, employment status, and belonging to priority vaccination groups.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) booster vaccination has been proposed in response to the new challenges of highly contagious variants, yet few studies have examined public acceptance of boosters. This study examined public acceptance of COVID-19 booster vaccination and its influencing factors by using the data from a self-administered online cross-sectional survey conducted in June 2021 in China. Multiple logistic analysis was used to examine the influencing factors of booster acceptance based on the health belief model (HBM). Among 1145 respondents, 84.80% reported to accept COVID-19 booster vaccination. Having COVID-19 vaccination history, perceiving high benefits and low barriers to booster vaccination, being younger (18-30 vs. 41-50), having a lower education level, being employed, and belonging to priority groups for vaccination were associated with increased odds of booster acceptance. The primary reason for refusing booster vaccination was concern about vaccine safety. The vast majority (92.8%) of respondents reported an annual willingness to pay between 0 and 300 CNY (0-46.29 USD) if the booster was not free. Our findings suggest that the acceptance rate of booster vaccination is relatively high in China, and the HBM-based analysis reveals that more efforts are needed to increase perceived benefits and reduce perceived barriers of vaccination to design effective and proper vaccination extension strategies when boosters become widely recommended.

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