Moon Ingyu, Han Junghee, Kim Keon
Alliance University (formerly Nyack College) School of Social Work, 2 Washington St. #2020, New York, NY 10004, USA.
University of Southern Indiana, Dept. of Social Work, 8600 University Boulevard, Evansville, IN 47712, USA.
Prev Med Rep. 2023 Jun;33:102200. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2023.102200. Epub 2023 Apr 5.
Although the COVID-19 vaccine is a key intervention against the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, vaccine hesitancy is a barrier to vaccination coverage, leading to a higher risk of COVID-19-related morbidity and mortality. To reduce vaccine hesitancy, the factors affecting it must be addressed. Based on the determinants of health approach, this study aimed to investigate whether the distribution of determinants of health differed between the vaccine hesitancy group and the vaccine acceptance group and to identify determinants of participants' hesitancy to receive the COVID-19 vaccine if it was available. This study utilized the 2020 California Health Interview Survey Data collected between May and December 2020. Data were collected using a population-based web and telephone health survey. Data from 21,949 participants in California were included, and 4,183 (23.4 %) showed vaccine hesitancy. The following determinants were positively associated with vaccine hesitancy: female sex, Black and American Indian/Alaskan Native ethnicity, smoking, poverty, U.S.-born citizen, frequent use of social media, food insecurity, and limited healthcare access. Older age, not having severe psychological distress, not having diabetes, and high perceived safety in the neighborhood were negatively associated with COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. This study also found that higher use of social media potentially threatened vaccine uptake, whereas frequent internet use was negatively associated with vaccine hesitancy. Public health and other relevant service providers should address the determinants of vaccine hesitancy and develop effective strategies and interventions for vaccine-hesitant groups.
尽管新冠疫苗是应对当前新冠疫情的关键干预措施,但疫苗犹豫是疫苗接种覆盖率的一个障碍,导致与新冠相关的发病和死亡风险更高。为了减少疫苗犹豫,必须解决影响它的因素。基于健康决定因素方法,本研究旨在调查疫苗犹豫组和疫苗接受组之间健康决定因素的分布是否存在差异,并确定如果有新冠疫苗,参与者犹豫接种的决定因素。本研究利用了2020年5月至12月期间收集的2020年加利福尼亚健康访谈调查数据。数据通过基于人群的网络和电话健康调查收集。纳入了来自加利福尼亚的21949名参与者的数据,其中4183人(23.4%)表现出疫苗犹豫。以下决定因素与疫苗犹豫呈正相关:女性、黑人以及美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民种族、吸烟、贫困、美国出生公民、频繁使用社交媒体、粮食不安全以及医疗保健机会有限。年龄较大、没有严重心理困扰、没有糖尿病以及邻里间较高的安全感与新冠疫苗犹豫呈负相关。本研究还发现,更多地使用社交媒体可能会威胁疫苗接种,而频繁使用互联网与疫苗犹豫呈负相关。公共卫生和其他相关服务提供者应解决疫苗犹豫的决定因素,并为疫苗犹豫群体制定有效的策略和干预措施。