4.5 Article

Intention to vaccinate young children against COVID-19: a large-scale survey of Hong Kong parents

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出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2022.2065838

关键词

Parents' intention; vaccine hesitancy; COVID-19 vaccines; child vaccination; vaccines campaign

资金

  1. Research Impact Clusters - Department of Early Childhood Education, The Education University of Hong Kong

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COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy is high among parents in Hong Kong, with higher willingness for vaccination when more vaccine choices are available, followed by school resumption considerations, and least willingness when there are policy restrictions. Additionally, parents with higher education backgrounds and family income are less willing to vaccinate their children.
COVID-19 vaccines (Sinovac and Pfizer/BioNTech) have recently been approved for Hong Kong children. Understanding parental intentions to vaccinate children against COVID-19 is important to the development of an effective COVID-19 vaccine campaign. From a large-scale, geographically representative dataset in Hong Kong (N = 11,141), we examined parents' intentions to vaccinate their children against COVID-19 under three conditions: (1) no policy restrictions, (2) vaccination rate considered for school resumption, and (3) more choices of vaccine. Results showed that levels of vaccine hesitancy in Hong Kong parents are high. Hong Kong parents' intention to vaccinate their children was highest when there were more vaccines to choose from, followed by when vaccination rate was considered to resume school, and when there was no policy restrictions. Finally, Hong Kong parents with higher education backgrounds and family income were less willing to vaccinate their children. Together, these findings indicate that effective vaccines campaign should consider the characteristics and preferences of parents who have little intention to vaccinate within a specific social context.

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