4.6 Article

Factors related to COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among middle-income and low-income adults in the USA

Journal

JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH
Volume 77, Issue 5, Pages 328-335

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/jech-2021-218535

Keywords

COVID-19; vaccination; immunization; epidemics; epidemiology

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This study aimed to understand the characteristics, perceptions, and beliefs of COVID-19 vaccination among middle-income and low-income US adults before its widespread rollout. The results showed that vaccine acceptance was high at 76% with 66.9% reporting intent to receive the vaccine. Vaccine hesitancy was associated with poor mental health and alcohol and substance misuse. Factors influencing vaccine acceptance included age, education, children, region, mental health and social support, threat perception, opinion of governmental response, risk exposure and prevention activities, and rejection of COVID-19 vaccine concerns.
BackgroundVaccine hesitancy has been an ongoing challenge in campaigns, especially the rapid development and approval of the COVID-19 vaccines. The goal of this study was to understand the characteristics, perceptions and beliefs of COVID-19 vaccination prior to its widespread rollout among middle-income and low-income US adults. MethodsUsing a national sample of 2101 adults who completed an online assessment in 2021, this study examines the association of demographics, attitudes and behaviours related to COVID-19 vaccination intentions. Adaptive least absolute shrinkage and selection operator models were used to select these specific covariate and participant responses. Poststratification weights were generated using raking procedures and applied to improve generalisability. Results and conclusionVaccine acceptance was high at 76% with 66.9% reporting intent to receive the COVID-19 vaccine when available. Only 8.8% of vaccine supporters screened positive for COVID-19-related stress compared with 9.3% among the vaccine hesitant. However, there were more people with vaccine hesitancy who screened positive for poor mental health and alcohol and substance misuse. The three main vaccine concerns were side effects (50.4%), safety (29.7%) and mistrust of vaccine distribution (14.8%).Factors influencing vaccine acceptance included age, education, children, region, mental health and social support, threat perception, opinion of governmental response, risk exposure and prevention activities and rejecting COVID-19 vaccine concerns. The results indicated acceptance was more strongly associated with beliefs and attitudes about the vaccine than sociodemographics, which are noteworthy and may lead to targeted interventions to increase COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among subgroups who are vaccine hesitant.

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