4.7 Article

Healthcare Access and Experiences of Racial Discrimination as Predictors of General Vaccine Hesitancy

期刊

VACCINES
卷 11, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines11020409

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vaccines; general vaccine hesitancy; healthcare access; racial discrimination

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The study addresses the limited knowledge on general vaccine hesitancy by examining socio-demographic factors, healthcare access, and experiences of racial discrimination. Age, gender, race, and education were found to influence vaccine hesitancy. Lack of health insurance coverage and limited healthcare access were associated with higher vaccine hesitancy. Additionally, higher experiences of racial discrimination were linked to increased vaccine hesitancy. These findings highlight the importance of policy, systems, and environmental factors in addressing vaccine hesitancy, as well as the need to address healthcare inequities.
The literature regarding vaccine hesitancy is limited to specific vaccines rather than general vaccine hesitancy. No studies have examined the relationship of general vaccine hesitancy to healthcare access and experiences of racial discrimination. This study fills gaps by examining: (1) socio-demographic factors; (2) associations between healthcare access; and (3) experiences with racial discrimination and general vaccine hesitancy. Survey data were obtained from 2022 US adults from 7 September to 3 October 2021. Racial and ethnic minority populations were oversampled. Age, gender, race, and education were predictors of vaccine hesitancy. Asian respondents had less than two-thirds the odds of being vaccine hesitant. Healthcare access was associated with vaccine hesitancy. Not having health insurance coverage, not having a primary care provider, and not seeing a provider for a routine check-up in the past two years were associated with higher vaccine hesitancy. For every one-point increase in racial discrimination score (0-45), the odds of being more vaccine hesitant increased by a factor of 1.03. The findings demonstrate that policy, systems, and environmental factors are critical to addressing vaccine hesitancy. Given the associations between vaccine hesitancy and racial discrimination and healthcare access, more attention should be given to inequities in the healthcare systems in order to address vaccine hesitancy.

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