4.7 Article

COVID-19 Concerns, Vaccine Acceptance and Trusted Sources of Information among Patients Cared for in a Safety-Net Health System

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10060928

Keywords

COVID-19 concerns; COVID-19 vaccine acceptance; trusted sources of COVID vaccine information

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [2 U54 GM10490]

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This study examined COVID-19 concerns, vaccine acceptance, and trusted information sources among patients in a safety-net health system in Louisiana. The findings showed that participants viewed COVID-19 as a serious threat to public health, with variations among different demographic groups. The majority of participants had received the COVID-19 vaccine, and females were more likely to be vaccinated. Physicians were considered the most trusted source of vaccine information, while social media was the least trusted.
We examined COVID-19 concerns, vaccine acceptance, and trusted sources of information among patients in a safety-net health system in Louisiana. The participants were surveyed via structured telephone interviews over nine months in 2021. Of 204 adult participants, 65% were female, 52% were Black, 44.6% were White, and 46.5% were rural residents. The mean age was 53 years. The participants viewed COVID-19 as a serious public health threat (8.6 on 10-point scale). Black adults were more likely to perceive the virus as a threat than White adults (9.4 vs. 7.6 p < 0.0001), urban residents more than rural (9.0 vs. 8.2 p = 0.02), females more than males (8.9 vs. 8.1 p = 0.03). The majority (66.7%) had gotten the COVID-19 vaccine, with females being more likely than males (74.7 vs. 54.5% p = 0.02). There was no difference by race or rural residence. Overall, participants reported that physicians were the most trusted source of COVID-19 vaccine information (77.6%); followed by the CDC/FDA (50.5%), State Department of Health (41.4%), pharmacists (37.1%), nurses (36.7%); only 3.8% trusted social media. All sources were more trusted among black adults than White adults except family and social media. These findings could help inform efforts to design trustworthy public health messaging and clinical communication about the virus and vaccines.

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