| Literature DB >> 34277329 |
Jennifer D Allen1, Wenhui Feng2, Laura Corlin2,3, Thalia Porteny4, Andrea Acevedo1, Deborah Schildkraut5, Erin King6, Keren Ladin2,4, Qiang Fu1, Thomas J Stopka2,7.
Abstract
Understanding reasons for COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy is necessary to ensure maximum uptake, needed for herd immunity. We conducted a cross-sectional online survey between May 29-June 20, 2020 among a national sample of U.S. adults ages 18 years and over to assess cognitive, attitudinal and normative beliefs associated with not intending to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Of 1,219 respondents, 17.7% said that they would not get a vaccine and 24.2% were unsure. In multivariable analyses controlled for gender, age, income, education, religious affiliation, health insurance coverage, and political party affiliation, those who reported that they were unwilling be vaccinated (versus those who were willing) were less likely to agree that vaccines are safe/effective (Relative Risk Ratio (RRR): 0.45, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.31, 0.66), that everyone has a responsibility to be vaccinated (RRR: 0.39, 95% CI: 0.30, 0.52), that public authorities should be able to mandate vaccination (RRR: 0.75, 95% CI: 0.58, 0.98), and that if everyone else were vaccinated they would not need a vaccine (RRR: 1.36, 95% CI: 1.04, 1.78). Our results suggest that health messages should emphasize the safety and efficacy of vaccines, as well as the fact that vaccinating oneself is important, even if the level of uptake in the community is high.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Coronavirus; United States; attitudes; health disparities; vaccine
Year: 2021 PMID: 34277329 PMCID: PMC8277541 DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2021.101494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Med Rep ISSN: 2211-3355
Characteristics of survey sample, United States, May 29-June 10, 2020 (n = 1219).±.
| Characteristic | N (weighted %) |
|---|---|
| Men | 610 (47.9%) |
| Women | 609 (52.1%) |
| 18–29 | 123 (20.3%) |
| 30–44 | 265 (25.3%) |
| 45–59 | 334 (25.2%) |
| 60+ | 497 (29.2%) |
| NH White | 862 (63.4%) |
| NH Black | 111 (11.7%) |
| NH Asian | 47 (5.9%) |
| Hispanic | 146 (16.7%) |
| Multiracial or Other | 53 (2.3%) |
| Less than $19,999 | 89 (9.5%) |
| $20,000 to $49,999 | 248 (22.8%) |
| $50,000 to $84,999 | 289 (25.0%) |
| $85,000 to $149,999 | 322 (23.4%) |
| $150,000 or more | 271 (19.3%) |
| Less than high school | 93 (10.6%) |
| High school | 357 (27.9%) |
| Some college | 322 (28.0%) |
| Bachelor's degree or higher | 447 (33.5%) |
| Working | 776 (65.6%) |
| Not working | 443 (34.4%) |
| Married/living with partner | 802 (59.9%) |
| Other | 417 (40.1%) |
| Catholic | 306 (25.2%) |
| Protestant | 437 (34.0%); |
| Other religion | 167 (14.1%) |
| Unaffiliated | 291 (25.1%) |
| Missing/refused | 18 (1.6%) |
| Employer provided | 624 (50.3%) |
| Governmental insurance or marketplace | 407 (31.8%) |
| No Insurance | 65 (7.1%) |
| Other insurance | 35 (2.7%) |
| Missing/refused | 88 (8.0%) |
| Yes | 70 (5.9%) |
| Don't know/refused | 170 (14.1%) |
| Yes | 48 (4.1%) |
| Don't know/refused | 32 (3.4%) |
| Democrat | 411 (35.7%) |
| Republican | 383 (28.5%) |
| Other | 425 (35.8%) |
| 0 Condition | 357 (32.4%) |
| 1–2 Conditions | 660 (53.9%) |
| 3 + Conditions | 202 (13.6%) |
±Sample weights applied to be representative of U.S. population.
Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.
*For full list, see Appendix 1.
Fig. 1Vaccine attitudes and beliefs, stratified by intent to vaccinate, United States, May 29-June 10, 2020 (n = 1219). ± Blue = yes, intend to be vaccinated; orange = no do not intend to be vaccinated; gray = don’t know/unsure about vaccination. ± Sample weights applied to be representative of U.S. population. (For interpretation of the references to color in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)
Sample characteristics by COVID-19 vaccination intentions, United States, May 29-June 10, 2020 (n = 1219).±
| Intend to vaccinate | Do not intend to vaccinate | Unsure about intentions | p value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 728 (58.2%) | 197 (17.7%) | 294 (24.2%) | ||
| 0.038 | ||||
| Men | 386 (62.4%) | 96 (16.3%) | 128 (21.3%) | |
| Women | 342 (54.3%) | 101 (18.9%) | 166 (26.8%) | |
| 0.005 | ||||
| 18–29 | 82 (65.3%) | 21 (16.9%) | 20 (17.8%) | |
| 30–44 | 141 (50.8%) | 48 (19.7%) | 76 (29.5%) | |
| 45–59 | 183 (53.7%) | 71 (22.6%) | 80 (23.8%) | |
| 60+ | 322 (63.5%) | 57 (12.2%) | 118 (24.2%) | |
| 0.074 | ||||
| NH White | 526 (59.2%) | 128 (15.8%) | 208 (24.9%) | |
| NH Black | 54 (49.5%) | 28 (28.8%) | 29 (21.6%) | |
| NH Asian | 28 (58.4%) | 7 (15.3%) | 12 (26.2%) | |
| Hispanic | 88 (60.4%) | 28 (19.0%) | 30 (20.6%) | |
| Multiracial or Other | 32 (56.1%) | 6 (7.4%) | 15 (36.5%) | |
| <0.001 | ||||
| Less than $19,999 | 39 (42.7%) | 20 (25.9%) | 30 (31.4%) | |
| $20,000 to $49,999 | 122 (48.9%) | 52 (20.9%) | 74 (30.3%) | |
| $50,000 to $84,999 | 162 (56.5%) | 59 (20.4%) | 68 (23.1%) | |
| $85,000 to $149,999 | 206 (62.9%) | 46 (15.8%) | 70 (21.3%) | |
| $150,000 or more | 199 (73.2%) | 20 (8.6%) | 52 (18.2%) | |
| <0.001 | ||||
| Less than high school | 48 (51.5%) | 24 (25.8%) | 21 (22.7%) | |
| High school | 153 (41.1%) | 83 (25.0%) | 121 (33.8%) | |
| Some college | 194 (59.3%) | 57 (18.8%) | 71 (21.9%) | |
| Bachelor's degree or higher | 333 (73.6%) | 33 (8.0%) | 81 (18.4%) | |
| 0.164 | ||||
| Working | 462 (58.9%) | 135 (18.7%) | 179 (22.4%) | |
| Not working | 266 (56.8%) | 62 (15.7%) | 115 (27.5%) | |
| 0.335 | ||||
| Married/living with partner | 496 (60.1%) | 123 (16.6%) | 183 (23.3%) | |
| Other | 232 (55.3%) | 74 (19.3%) | 111 (25.4%) | |
| 0.002 | ||||
| Catholic | 203 (65.5%) | 33 (11.8%) | 70 (22.7%) | |
| Protestant | 230 (51.2%) | 86 (21.8%) | 121 (27.1%) | |
| Other religion | 98 (53.8%) | 32 (22.4%) | 37 (23.8%) | |
| Unaffiliated | 189 (64.0%) | 43 (15.5%) | 59 (20.5%) | |
| Missing/refused | 8 (38.1%) | 3 (15.9%) | 7 (46.0%) | |
| 0.01 | ||||
| Employer Provided | 387 (61.3%) | 87 (14.7%) | 150 (24.1%) | |
| Governmental/marketplace | 246 (56.7%) | 59 (17.9%) | 102 (25.4%) | |
| No Insurance | 26 (41.4%) | 25 (35.8%) | 14 (22.8%) | |
| Other insurance | 21 (62.9%) | 8 (20.6%) | 6 (16.5%) | |
| Missing/refused | 48 (57.9%) | 18 (18.3%) | 22 (23.9%) | |
| 0.165 | ||||
| No | 575 (57.0%) | 162 (18.2%) | 242 (24.7%) | |
| Yes | 41 (58.0%) | 14 (24.1%) | 15 (18.0%) | |
| Don't know/refused | 112 (64.7%) | 21 (11.9%) | 37 (23.4%) | |
| 0.635 | ||||
| No | 687 (58.9%) | 182 (17.4%) | 270 (23.7%) | |
| Yes | 24 (50.5%) | 9 (22.7%) | 15 (26.8%) | |
| Don't know/refused | 17 (48.8%) | 6 (18.0%) | 9 (33.2%) | |
| <0.001 | ||||
| Democrat | 300 (71.0%) | 33 (11.1%) | 78 (17.9%) | |
| Republican | 191 (46.7%) | 93 (26.8%) | 99 (26.5%) | |
| Other | 237 (54.5%) | 71 (17.0%) | 117 (28.5%) | |
| 0.313 | ||||
| 0 Condition | 230 (62.6%) | 57 (17.0%) | 70 (20.4%) | |
| 1–2 Conditions | 378 (55.9%) | 107 (18.0%) | 175 (26.2%) | |
| 3 + Conditions | 120 (56.7%) | 33 (18.0%) | 49 (25.3%) | |
± Sample weights applied to be representative of U.S. population.
*For full list, see Appendix 1.
Percentages may not add up to 100% due to rounding.
Associations with vaccination intentions, United States, May 29-June 10, 2020 (n = 1219).±
| RRR | |
|---|---|
| Most vaccines are safe and/or effective | 0.45** |
| [0.31, 0.66] | |
| I/Everyone should get the vaccine | 0.39** |
| [0.30, 0.52] | |
| If everyone else is vaccinated, I don't need to | 1.36* |
| [1.04, 1.78] | |
| Public authorities hold the best interests of public | 0.82 |
| [0.62, 1.07] | |
| Public authorities should be able to mandate vaccination | 0.75* |
| [0.58, 0.98] | |
| Most vaccines are safe and/or effective | 0.59** |
| [0.46, 0.77] | |
| I/Everyone should get the vaccine | 0.60** |
| [0.47, 0.75] | |
| If everyone else is vaccinated, I don't need to | 1.26* |
| [1.05, 1.53] | |
| Public authorities hold the best interests of public | 0.99 |
| [0.84, 1.17] | |
| Public authorities should be able to mandate vaccination | 0.82* |
| [0.71, 0.95] | |
RRR: Relative Risk Ratio; CI: confidence interval * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01 ± Sample weights applied to be representative of U.S. population.
Covariates in both models include: gender (men, women); age (continuous); race/ethnic status (non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, non-Hispanic Asian, Hispanic, multi-racial or other); household income as a percentage of Federal Poverty Level27; education (less than high school, high school, some college, bachelor's degree or higher); religion (Catholic, Protestant, other religion, unaffiliated, missing/refused); health insurance (employer provided, governmental insurance or marketplace, no insuranc