Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, UK; NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford, UK.
The Psychometrics Centre, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Lancet Public Health. 2021 Jun;6(6):e416-e427. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(21)00096-7. Epub 2021 May 13.
The effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccination programme depends on mass participation: the greater the number of people vaccinated, the less risk to the population. Concise, persuasive messaging is crucial, particularly given substantial levels of vaccine hesitancy in the UK. Our aim was to test which types of written information about COVID-19 vaccination, in addition to a statement of efficacy and safety, might increase vaccine acceptance.
For this single-blind, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial, we aimed to recruit 15 000 adults in the UK, who were quota sampled to be representative. Participants were randomly assigned equally across ten information conditions stratified by level of vaccine acceptance (willing, doubtful, or strongly hesitant). The control information condition comprised the safety and effectiveness statement taken from the UK National Health Service website; the remaining conditions addressed collective benefit, personal benefit, seriousness of the pandemic, and safety concerns. After online provision of vaccination information, participants completed the Oxford COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy Scale (outcome measure; score range 7-35) and the Oxford Vaccine Confidence and Complacency Scale (mediation measure). The primary outcome was willingness to be vaccinated. Participants were analysed in the groups they were allocated. p values were adjusted for multiple comparisons. The study was registered with ISRCTN, ISRCTN37254291.
From Jan 19 to Feb 5, 2021, 15 014 adults were recruited. Vaccine hesitancy had reduced from 26·9% the previous year to 16·9%, so recruitment was extended to Feb 18 to recruit 3841 additional vaccine-hesitant adults. 12 463 (66·1%) participants were classified as willing, 2932 (15·6%) as doubtful, and 3460 (18·4%) as strongly hesitant (ie, report that they will avoid being vaccinated for as long as possible or will never get vaccinated). Information conditions did not alter COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in those willing or doubtful (adjusted p values >0·70). In those strongly hesitant, COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was reduced, in comparison to the control condition, by personal benefit information (mean difference -1·49, 95% CI -2·16 to -0·82; adjusted p=0·0015), directly addressing safety concerns about speed of development (-0·91, -1·58 to -0·23; adjusted p=0·0261), and a combination of all information (-0·86, -1·53 to -0·18; adjusted p=0·0313). In those strongly hesitant, provision of personal benefit information reduced hesitancy to a greater extent than provision of information on the collective benefit of not personally getting ill (-0·97, 95% CI -1·64 to -0·30; adjusted p=0·0165) or the collective benefit of not transmitting the virus (-1·01, -1·68 to -0·35; adjusted p=0·0150). Ethnicity and gender were found to moderate information condition outcomes.
In the approximately 10% of the population who are strongly hesitant about COVID-19 vaccines, provision of information on personal benefit reduces hesitancy to a greater extent than information on collective benefits. Where perception of risk from vaccines is most salient, decision making becomes centred on the personal. As such, messaging that stresses the counterbalancing personal benefits is likely to prove most effective. The messaging from this study could be used in public health communications. Going forwards, the study highlights the need for future health campaigns to engage with the public on the terrain that is most salient to them.
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Oxford Biomedical Research Centre and NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Centre.
COVID-19 疫苗接种计划的有效性取决于大众的参与程度:接种疫苗的人数越多,对人群的风险就越小。简洁、有说服力的信息传递至关重要,尤其是在英国,人们对疫苗犹豫不决的程度相当高。我们的目的是测试除了疫苗的功效和安全性声明之外,关于 COVID-19 疫苗接种的哪些类型的书面信息可能会增加疫苗的接受度。
这是一项单盲、平行组、随机对照试验,我们计划在英国招募 15000 名成年人,他们是按配额抽样的,以保证代表性。参与者根据疫苗接受度(愿意、怀疑或强烈犹豫)平均分配到十个信息条件中。对照组的信息包含来自英国国家医疗服务体系网站的安全性和有效性声明;其余条件涉及集体利益、个人利益、大流行的严重性和安全性问题。在提供疫苗接种信息后,参与者完成了牛津 COVID-19 疫苗犹豫量表(主要结局;评分范围 7-35)和牛津疫苗信心和自满量表(中介结局)。主要结局是愿意接种疫苗。参与者按他们被分配的组别进行分析。p 值针对多重比较进行了调整。该研究在 ISRCTN 和 ISRCTN37254291 上注册。
从 2021 年 1 月 19 日至 2 月 5 日,我们招募了 15014 名成年人。疫苗犹豫情绪从去年的 26.9%下降到 16.9%,因此我们将招募时间延长到 2 月 18 日,以招募另外 3841 名疫苗犹豫情绪强烈的成年人。12463 名(66.1%)参与者被归类为愿意,2932 名(15.6%)为怀疑,3460 名(18.4%)为强烈犹豫(即表示他们将尽可能避免接种疫苗或永远不会接种疫苗)。在愿意或怀疑的人群中,信息条件并没有改变 COVID-19 疫苗的犹豫情绪(调整后的 p 值>0.70)。在强烈犹豫的人群中,与对照组相比,个人利益信息降低了 COVID-19 疫苗的犹豫情绪(平均差值-1.49,95%置信区间-2.16 至-0.82;调整后的 p=0.0015),直接解决了对快速开发的安全性担忧(-0.91,-1.58 至-0.23;调整后的 p=0.0261),以及所有信息的组合(-0.86,-1.53 至-0.18;调整后的 p=0.0313)。在强烈犹豫的人群中,提供个人利益信息比提供不个人生病的集体利益信息(-0.97,95%置信区间-1.64 至-0.30;调整后的 p=0.0165)或不传播病毒的集体利益信息(-1.01,-1.68 至-0.35;调整后的 p=0.0150)更能降低犹豫情绪。研究发现,种族和性别是信息条件结果的调节因素。
在对 COVID-19 疫苗犹豫不决的大约 10%的人群中,提供个人利益信息比提供集体利益信息更能降低犹豫情绪。在疫苗风险认知最突出的地方,决策就集中在个人身上。因此,强调个人利益平衡的信息传递可能是最有效的。本研究的信息可以用于公共卫生宣传。今后,这项研究强调了未来健康运动需要与公众就对他们最有意义的领域进行接触。
英国国家卫生研究院(NIHR)牛津生物医学研究中心和牛津健康生物医学研究中心。