Smith Louise E, Sim Julius, Amlôt Richard, Cutts Megan, Dasch Hannah, Sevdalis Nick, Rubin G James, Sherman Susan M
King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, UK; NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Emergency Preparedness and Response, UK.
Keele University, School of Medicine, UK.
J Psychosom Res. 2021 Nov 17;152:110679. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2021.110679.
Concern about side effects is one of the most common reasons for refusing vaccination. Side-effect expectations are known to predict perception of side effects. We aimed to investigate the percentage of people who thought side effects from COVID-19 vaccination were likely and investigate factors associated with side-effect expectation.
Online cross-sectional survey of 1470 UK adults who had not been vaccinated for COVID-19 (conducted 13 to 15 January 2021). We asked participants how likely they thought side effects from COVID-19 vaccination were. Linear regression analyses were used to investigate associations with side-effect expectations.
Most participants were uncertain whether they would experience side effects from a COVID-19 vaccine; only a minority reported that side effects were very likely (9.4%, 95% CI 7.9% to 10.9%, n = 138/1470). Personal and clinical characteristics, general, and COVID-19 vaccination beliefs and attitudes explained 29.7% of the variance in side-effect expectation, with COVID-19 vaccination beliefs alone accounting for 17.2%. Side-effect expectations were associated with: older age, being clinically extremely vulnerable to COVID-19, being afraid of needles, lower perceived social norms for COVID-19 vaccination, lower perceived necessity and safety of COVID-19 vaccination, and perceived lack of information about COVID-19 and vaccination.
Side-effect expectation was associated with believing that COVID-19 vaccination was unsafe, ineffective and that others would be less likely to approve of you having a COVID-19 vaccination. Communications should emphasise the safety, effectiveness, and widespread uptake of vaccination, while promoting accurate perceptions of the incidence of vaccination side effects.
对副作用的担忧是拒绝接种疫苗最常见的原因之一。已知对副作用的预期可预测对副作用的感知。我们旨在调查认为新冠疫苗接种可能产生副作用的人群比例,并调查与副作用预期相关的因素。
对1470名未接种新冠疫苗的英国成年人进行在线横断面调查(于2021年1月13日至15日进行)。我们询问参与者认为新冠疫苗接种产生副作用的可能性有多大。采用线性回归分析来研究与副作用预期的关联。
大多数参与者不确定自己是否会经历新冠疫苗的副作用;只有少数人报告副作用很可能发生(9.4%,95%置信区间7.9%至10.9%,n = 138/1470)。个人和临床特征、一般情况以及对新冠疫苗接种的信念和态度解释了副作用预期差异的29.7%,仅新冠疫苗接种信念就占17.2%。副作用预期与以下因素相关:年龄较大、临床上极易感染新冠、害怕打针、对新冠疫苗接种的社会规范认知较低、对新冠疫苗接种的必要性和安全性认知较低,以及认为缺乏关于新冠和疫苗接种的信息。
副作用预期与认为新冠疫苗接种不安全、无效以及他人不太可能赞成你接种新冠疫苗有关。宣传应强调疫苗接种的安全性、有效性和广泛接种情况,同时促进对疫苗接种副作用发生率的准确认知。