Ebrahimi Omid V, Sandbakken Ella Marie, Moss Sigrun Marie, Johnson Sverre Urnes, Hoffart Asle, Bauermeister Sarah, Solbakken Ole André, Westlye Lars T, Leonardsen Esten H
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Anna Watts Building, Woodstock Rd, Oxford, OX2 6GG, UK.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
BMC Med. 2025 Mar 12;23(1):155. doi: 10.1186/s12916-025-03953-y.
Vaccine hesitancy, the delay in acceptance or reluctance to vaccinate, ranks among the top threats to global health. Identifying modifiable factors contributing to vaccine hesitancy is crucial for developing targeted interventions to increase vaccination uptake.
This mixed-methods multiple population study utilized gradient boosting machines and thematic analysis to identify modifiable predictors of vaccine hesitancy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Predictors of vaccine hesitancy were investigated in 2926 Norwegian adults (M = 37.91, 79.69% female), before the predictive utility of these variables was investigated in an independent sample of 734 adults in the UK (M = 40.34, 57.08% female). Two independent teams of authors conducted the machine learning and thematic analyses, blind to each other's analytic procedures and results.
The machine learning model performed well in discerning vaccine hesitant (n = 248, 8.48% and n = 109, 14.85%, Norway and UK, respectively) from vaccine uptaking individuals (n = 2678, 91.52% and n = 625, 85.15%), achieving an AUC of 0.94 (AUPRC: 0.72; balanced accuracy: 86%; sensitivity = 0.81; specificity = 0.98) in the Norwegian sample, and an AUC of 0.98 (AUPRC: 0.89; balanced accuracy: 89%; sensitivity = 0.83; specificity = 0.97) in the out-of-sample replication in the UK. The mixed methods investigation identified five categories of modifiable risk tied to vaccine hesitancy, including illusion of invulnerability, doubts about vaccine efficacy, mistrust in official entities, minimization of the societal impact of COVID-19, and health-related fears tied to vaccination. The portrayal of rare incidents across alternative media platforms as fear amplifiers, and the mainstream media's stigmatizing presentation of unvaccinated individuals, were provided as additional motives underlying vaccine reluctance and polarization. The thematic analysis further revealed information overload, fear of needles, previous negative vaccination experiences, fear of not getting healthcare follow-up after vaccination if needed, and vaccine aversion due to underlying (psychiatric) illness (e.g., eating disorders) as motives underlying vaccine hesitance.
The identified influential predictors were consistent across two European samples, highlighting their generalizability across European populations. These predictors offer insights about modifiable factors that could be adapted by public health campaigns in mitigating misconceptions and fears related to vaccination toward increasing vaccine uptake. Moreover, the results highlight the media's responsibility, as mediators of the public perception of vaccines, to minimize polarization and provide accurate portrayals of rare vaccine-related incidents, reducing the risk aggravating fear and reactance to vaccination.
疫苗犹豫,即延迟接种或不愿接种疫苗,是全球健康面临的最大威胁之一。识别导致疫苗犹豫的可改变因素对于制定有针对性的干预措施以提高疫苗接种率至关重要。
这项混合方法的多人群研究利用梯度提升机和主题分析来确定新冠疫情期间疫苗犹豫的可改变预测因素。在2926名挪威成年人(平均年龄 = 37.91岁,79.69%为女性)中调查了疫苗犹豫的预测因素,之后在734名英国成年人(平均年龄 = 40.34岁,57.08%为女性)的独立样本中研究了这些变量的预测效用。两个独立的作者团队进行了机器学习和主题分析,彼此对对方的分析程序和结果不知情。
机器学习模型在区分疫苗犹豫者(挪威分别为248人,占8.48%;英国为109人,占14.85%)和接种疫苗者(挪威为2678人,占91.52%;英国为625人,占85.15%)方面表现良好,在挪威样本中的曲线下面积(AUC)为0.94(精确召回率曲线下面积:0.72;平衡准确率:86%;敏感性 = 0.81;特异性 = 0.98),在英国的样本外复制中的AUC为0.98(精确召回率曲线下面积:0.89;平衡准确率:89%;敏感性 = 0.83;特异性 = 0.97)。混合方法调查确定了与疫苗犹豫相关的五类可改变风险,包括无懈可击的错觉、对疫苗效力的怀疑、对官方机构的不信任、对新冠疫情社会影响的最小化,以及与疫苗接种相关的健康恐惧。另类媒体平台将罕见事件描绘为恐惧放大器,以及主流媒体对未接种疫苗者的污名化呈现,被认为是疫苗犹豫和两极分化的额外动机。主题分析进一步揭示了信息过载、害怕打针、以前的负面接种经历、担心接种疫苗后若需要得不到医疗随访,以及因潜在(精神)疾病(如饮食失调)导致的疫苗厌恶,这些都是疫苗犹豫的动机。
在两个欧洲样本中确定的有影响力的预测因素是一致的,突出了它们在欧洲人群中的普遍性。这些预测因素为可改变因素提供了见解,公共卫生运动可以据此调整,以减少与疫苗接种相关的误解和恐惧,从而提高疫苗接种率。此外,研究结果凸显了媒体作为公众对疫苗认知的调解者的责任,即尽量减少两极分化,并准确呈现罕见的疫苗相关事件,降低加剧对疫苗接种的恐惧和抵触情绪的风险。