期刊
VACCINES
卷 10, 期 4, 页码 -出版社
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10040541
关键词
knowledge; attitudes; COVID-19 vaccine; medical students; Saudi Arabia
资金
- Deanship of Scientific Research [RGP-1438-048]
- King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
This study investigated the knowledge and attitudes of medical students in Saudi Arabia towards the COVID-19 vaccine, revealing lower levels of knowledge and more negative attitudes among preclinical students. However, the majority of students still recognized the importance of the COVID-19 vaccine in reducing the spread of the disease.
Medical students are the future caregivers of communities, and therefore it is important to rectify their misconceptions about the COVID-19 vaccine. We aimed to explore the knowledge and attitudes among medical students toward the COVID-19 vaccine in Saudi Arabia and to compare the level of knowledge between preclinical and clinical years. This epidemiological cross-sectional study of 1445 (47.3% were pre-clinical and 52.7% were clinical year) medical students was conducted at various universities in Saudi Arabia using a simple random sampling technique. The results revealed that 34.3% students did not know how the Pfizer vaccine worked, with a high proportion in preclinical students (69.4%). Almost 37% of participants thought that one could become infected with COVID-19 via the COVID-19 vaccine, and 67.1% of these students were pre-clinical. About 22.6% of students did not trust COVID-19 vaccine information from the health ministry, and the majority of them (79.8%) were pre-clinical. Vaccine hesitancy was shown by about 33.3% (n = 481) of subjects, and surprisingly, almost half of them (48.6%) thought that the COVID-19 vaccine involved conspiracy; the majority of them were pre-clinical (97.9%). The overall response of students indicates a significantly lower level of knowledge and increased negative attitudes of preclinical students toward the COVID-19 vaccine. However, the vast majority of students agreed on the importance of the COVID-19 vaccine to decrease the spread of the disease.
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