4.4 Article

Factors influencing staff attitudes to COVID-19 vaccination in care homes in England: a qualitative study

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BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

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BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12913-023-10031-7

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Care homes; COVID-19 vaccine; COVID-19 pandemic; Care home employees; Mandatory vaccination; Behavioural influences

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This study investigated the factors influencing COVID-19 vaccine uptake in care home staff, in order to develop strategies to increase vaccination rates. The study found that factors influencing uptake included the willingness to protect care home residents, staff, and family/friends from infection, the belief that vaccination provided a way back to normality, convenience of vaccination and access to accurate information, and a supporting social environment favoring vaccination. Barriers included fears about side-effects, a lack of trust due to the quick release of the vaccine, and feeling pressurized to accept vaccination if mandatory.
BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately affected people living and working in UK care homes causing high mortality rates. Vaccinating staff members and residents is considered the most effective intervention to reduce infection and its transmission rates. However, uptake of the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in care homes was variable. We sought to investigate factors influencing uptake of COVID-19 vaccination in care home staff to inform strategies to increase vaccination uptake and inform future preparedness.MethodsTwenty care home staff including managerial and administrative staff, nurses, healthcare practitioners and support staff from nine care homes across England participated in semi-structured telephone interviews (March-June 2021) exploring attitudes towards the COVID-19 vaccine and factors influencing uptake. We used thematic analysis to generate themes which were subsequently deductively mapped to the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation-Behaviour (COM-B) model. The Behavioural Change Wheel (BCW) was used to identify potential intervention strategies to address identified influences.ResultsEnablers to vaccine uptake included the willingness to protect care home residents, staff and family/friends from infection and the belief that vaccination provided a way back to normality (reflective motivation); convenience of vaccination and access to accurate information (physical opportunity); and a supporting social environment around them favouring vaccination (social opportunity). Barriers included fears about side-effects (automatic motivation); a lack of trust due to the quick release of the vaccine (reflective motivation); and feeling pressurised to accept vaccination if mandatory (automatic motivation).ConclusionsWe identified influences on COVID-19 vaccine uptake by care home staff that can inform the implementation of future vaccination programmes. Strategies likely to support uptake include information campaigns and facilitating communication between staff and managers to openly discuss concerns regarding possible vaccination side effects. Freedom of choice played an important role in the decision to be vaccinated suggesting that the decision to mandate vaccination may have unintended behavioural consequences.

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