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美国种族、收入、歧视与新冠疫苗接种状况、犹豫态度及可及性的关联:一项横断面研究

Associating Race, Income, and Discrimination with COVID-19 Vaccine Status, Hesitancy, and Access in the United States: A Cross-sectional Study.

作者信息

Dinero Rachel E, Kmush Brittany L

机构信息

Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Colgate University, Hamilton, NY, USA.

Department of Psychology, Le Moyne College, 1419 Salt Springs Rd., Syracuse, NY, USA.

出版信息

J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Jan 6. doi: 10.1007/s40615-024-02282-9.

Abstract

There is an emerging literature exploring the role of discrimination in vaccine hesitancy, particularly among Black individuals. The goal of the present research is to explore how COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, vaccine status, and vaccine access are associated with race, income, and discrimination. A quota sample of 798 Black/White and low/high income participants from the United States completed an online survey between March 8 and April 19, 2023. The survey assessed self-reported race, income, discrimination, vaccine hesitancy, and vaccine access. Perceived discrimination (B = .15, P = .002) and being Black (B = -.30, P < .001) were associated with higher vaccine hesitancy. Lower income White participants were less likely to be vaccinated than Black or higher income White participants (PR = .66, P = .04). The lowest vaccine access was reported by low-income White participants with high levels of discrimination and the highest access was reported by high-income Black participants with low levels of discrimination (B = -.03, P = .05). Our findings highlight the unique impact of discrimination on vaccine access and vaccine hesitancy. Further, despite previous literature identifying Black populations as having lower vaccine access, our findings suggest that lower income White participants reported the lowest vaccine access and were the least likely to be vaccinated. These findings have implications for understanding the impact of discrimination on vaccine-related beliefs and behaviors, which can inform vaccine-related communication in communities where discrimination is likely.

摘要

有越来越多的文献探讨歧视在疫苗犹豫中的作用,尤其是在黑人个体中。本研究的目的是探讨新冠疫苗犹豫、疫苗接种状况和疫苗可及性如何与种族、收入和歧视相关联。2023年3月8日至4月19日期间,来自美国的798名黑/白和低/高收入参与者组成的配额样本完成了一项在线调查。该调查评估了自我报告的种族、收入、歧视、疫苗犹豫和疫苗可及性。感知到的歧视(B = 0.15,P = 0.002)和黑人身份(B = -0.30,P < 0.001)与更高的疫苗犹豫相关。低收入白人参与者比黑人或高收入白人参与者接种疫苗的可能性更小(PR = 0.66,P = 0.04)。歧视程度高的低收入白人参与者报告的疫苗可及性最低,而歧视程度低的高收入黑人参与者报告的疫苗可及性最高(B = -0.03,P = 0.05)。我们的研究结果突出了歧视对疫苗可及性和疫苗犹豫的独特影响。此外,尽管先前的文献表明黑人人群的疫苗可及性较低,但我们的研究结果表明,低收入白人参与者报告的疫苗可及性最低,接种疫苗的可能性也最小。这些发现对于理解歧视对与疫苗相关的信念和行为的影响具有启示意义,可为可能存在歧视的社区中的疫苗相关沟通提供参考。

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