Department of Applied Social Sciences, Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, People's Republic of China.
Interdisciplinary Centre for Qualitative Research and Training, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, People's Republic of China.
BMC Geriatr. 2022 Apr 6;22(1):288. doi: 10.1186/s12877-022-03000-y.
COVID-19 vaccination is recommended for older adults by the World Health Organization. However, by July 15, 2021, only 26% of individuals over 60 years old in Hong Kong had received a first dose of the vaccine. The health belief model and the theory of planned behavior have been used to understand the determinants for COVID-19 vaccination in past literature. However, vaccination determinants can be complex and involve social and cultural factors that cannot be explained by micro-individual factors alone; hence, the health belief model and the theory of planned behavior cannot provide a complete understanding of vaccine hesitancy. Few studies on the barriers to, hesitancy toward, and motivations for COVID-19 vaccination among older Chinese adults have been performed. The aim of this study is to fill this gap by conducting a comprehensive analysis of this subject using the critical medical anthropology framework, extending the health belief model and the theory of planned behavior in understanding vaccination determinants among the older adult population.
Between November 2020 and February 2021, 31 adults (24 women and 7 men) over the age of 65 took part in semi-structured, one-on-one interviews. The data we gathered were then analyzed through a phenomenological approach.
Two major themes in the data were examined: barriers to vaccination and motivations for vaccination. The participants' perceptions of and hesitancy toward vaccination demonstrated a confluence of factors at the individual (trust, confidence, and social support networks), microsocial (stigma toward health care workers), intermediate-social (government), and macrosocial (cultural stereotypes, civic and collective responsibility, and economic considerations) levels according to the critical medical anthropology framework.
The decision to receive a COVID-19 vaccination is a complex consideration for older adults of low socioeconomic status in Hong Kong. Using the critical medical anthropology framework, the decision-making experience is a reflection of the interaction of factors at different layers of social levels. The findings of this study extend the health belief model and the theory of planned behavior regarding the understanding of vaccination perceptions and relevant behaviors in an older adult population.
世界卫生组织建议老年人接种 COVID-19 疫苗。然而,截至 2021 年 7 月 15 日,香港 60 岁以上人群中仅有 26%接种了第一剂疫苗。在过去的文献中,健康信念模型和计划行为理论被用于理解 COVID-19 疫苗接种的决定因素。然而,疫苗接种的决定因素可能很复杂,涉及社会和文化因素,仅凭微观个体因素无法解释;因此,健康信念模型和计划行为理论不能提供对疫苗犹豫的完整理解。针对中国老年人对 COVID-19 疫苗的接种障碍、犹豫和动机进行的研究很少。本研究旨在通过使用批判医学人类学框架对这一主题进行全面分析,扩展健康信念模型和计划行为理论在理解老年人群体疫苗接种决定因素中的应用,填补这一空白。
2020 年 11 月至 2021 年 2 月,31 名 65 岁以上的成年人(24 名女性和 7 名男性)参加了半结构化的一对一访谈。我们收集的数据随后通过现象学方法进行了分析。
对数据进行了两个主要主题的检查:接种疫苗的障碍和接种疫苗的动机。根据批判医学人类学框架,参与者对疫苗接种的看法和犹豫表明,在个人(信任、信心和社会支持网络)、微观社会(对医护人员的污名化)、中间社会(政府)和宏观社会(文化刻板印象、公民和集体责任以及经济考虑)层面上,各种因素的融合。
对于香港社会经济地位较低的老年人来说,接种 COVID-19 疫苗是一个复杂的考虑因素。使用批判医学人类学框架,决策过程是不同社会层面因素相互作用的反映。本研究的结果扩展了健康信念模型和计划行为理论,有助于理解老年人群体中疫苗接种的认知和相关行为。