COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy in an Underrepresented Minority Community

AbstractTo assess factors influencing acceptability of COVID-19 vaccine in a population of predominantly indigent, minority, pregnant and non-pregnant people of reproductive age. Cross-sectional survey using a modified Health Belief model administered between January 2021 and January 2022 at four hospitals in Brooklyn. Participants included English-speaking reproductive aged persons attending clinics at the participating sites. Descriptive and univariate data analyses were used for analysis. 283 eligible reproductive persons were approached of whom 272 completed the survey (96%). Three quarters said they would take the vaccine under certain circumstances ( “as soon as it is ready” [28.6%], “when my doctor recommends it” [21.3%] or “when enough people have received it to know if it works” [25%]), while 25% said they would never take the vaccine. When comparing persons that would take it under certain circumstances to those that never would, the “never” group was significantly more likely to note that, “they would not trust any COVID vaccine” (71.4% vs. 28.5%; p ≤ 0.0001). This greater level of distrust extended to greater distrust of doctors, government, family, newspapers, and media. However, 36% said they would be infl uenced by their doctor’s recommendation. Pregnant participants were significantly more likely to wait until their doctor recommended it (17.6% of pregnant persons compared to 3.7% of non-pregnant p <  0.0001). Despite mistrus...
Source: Journal of Community Health - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Source Type: research