Courtney Coughenour, PhD, and Maxim Gakh, MPH, JD, are Associate Professors and Manoj Sharma, PhD, is a Professor, Department of Social and Behavioral Health; Brian Labus, PhD, and Lung-Chang Chien, DrPH, are Assistant Professors, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics; all at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas School of Public Health, Las Vegas, NV.
Health Secur. 2021 Nov;19(6):592-604. doi: 10.1089/hs.2021.0079. Epub 2021 Dec 8.
In December 2020, we conducted a telephone survey to determine what factors are connected to COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among adults in Nevada. The survey was based on factors identified in other studies, such as demographic variables (age, race, ethnicity, gender, household income, urbanicity, educational attainment), health status, previous COVID-19 infections, social media engagement, adherence to social distancing guidelines, beliefs about COVID-19, and political ideology identifications. Using a proportional odds model, we compared vaccine hesitancy levels to determine the odds of being more likely versus unlikely to get the COVID-19 vaccine. Of 1,000 people surveyed, 30.4% exhibited vaccine hesitancy. Findings showed that adults with significantly lower odds of vaccine hesitancy included those who were male, older, worried about COVID-19 infection or its community effects, adhered to social distancing, and reported higher incomes. Adults who identified as African American or Black or as multiple or "other" races exhibited significantly higher odds of vaccine hesitancy than White adults. Adults self-identifying as conservative had significantly higher odds of vaccine hesitancy than others. Vaccine hesitancy levels suggest possible hurdles to addressing the COVID-19 pandemic in a state with high visitor volumes and demographics that resemble the country's future as minority White, highlighting possible lessons for future pandemics. Most measures of COVID-19 worry were not significantly associated with vaccine hesitancy, suggesting that vaccination efforts should focus on other motivators. COVID-19 vaccination efforts should also directly encourage uptake by younger and middle-aged adults who are female, African American, have lower incomes, and identify as conservative.
2020 年 12 月,我们进行了一项电话调查,以确定内华达州成年人对 COVID-19 疫苗犹豫不决的原因。该调查基于其他研究中确定的因素,如人口统计学变量(年龄、种族、族裔、性别、家庭收入、城市人口、教育程度)、健康状况、以前的 COVID-19 感染、社交媒体参与度、遵守社会隔离准则、对 COVID-19 的信念以及政治意识形态认同。我们使用比例优势模型比较了疫苗犹豫程度,以确定更有可能还是不太可能接种 COVID-19 疫苗的几率。在接受调查的 1000 人中,有 30.4%的人表现出对疫苗的犹豫。调查结果表明,男性、年龄较大、担心 COVID-19 感染或其对社区的影响、遵守社会隔离规定且报告收入较高的成年人接种疫苗的可能性明显较低。自我认同为非裔美国人和黑人或多种族或“其他”种族的成年人接种疫苗的可能性明显高于白人成年人。自我认同为保守派的成年人接种疫苗的可能性明显高于其他人。疫苗犹豫程度表明,在一个访客量高且人口统计学特征类似于未来少数族裔白人的州,解决 COVID-19 大流行可能存在障碍,这突出了未来大流行可能需要吸取的教训。大多数 COVID-19 担忧措施与疫苗犹豫之间没有显著关联,这表明疫苗接种工作应侧重于其他激励因素。COVID-19 疫苗接种工作还应直接鼓励年轻和中年女性、非裔美国人、收入较低和认同保守派的成年人接种疫苗。