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Social Response to the Vaccine against COVID-19: The Underrated Power of Influence

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Auteur
Mouliou D.S., Pantazopoulos I., Gourgoulianis K.I.
Date
2022
Language
en
DOI
10.3390/jpm12010015
Sujet
SARS-CoV-2 vaccine
adult
Article
coronavirus disease 2019
cost effectiveness analysis
cross-sectional study
decision making
economic aspect
education
female
government
health care policy
human
human experiment
internal consistency
Internet
Likert scale
male
middle aged
normal human
preventive medicine
questionnaire
sex difference
social aspect
social life
social media
vaccination
vaccine hesitancy
MDPI
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Résumé
Background: The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has highlighted the need for preventive medicine and vaccinology to be paralleled to eliminate COVID-19 cases. Methods: A web-based questionnaire was disseminated through social media in the late November assessing the factors that may have influenced the final response to vaccination against COVID-19 in vaccinated and non-vaccinated Greek people. Results: Women, the younger generations, and university graduates were more likely to accept vaccination, whereas men, those with a basic education level, and the older generation showed a hesitance to the vaccine against COVID-19. About half of the vaccinated participants were influenced in their final decision mainly by being informed from the internet (50.4%), their work (51.7%), and social life (53.1%) while half of the non-vaccinated individuals were mostly influenced by keeping updated from the internet (55.5%) and by government policies (51.3%). COVID-19 risk (OR 2.511; CI 2.149–2.934; p = 0.000), frequent vaccinations for emerging pathogens (OR 14.022; CI 11.998-16.389), and social life (OR 2.828; CI 2.417–3.309; p = 0.000) had a significant impact on people’s positive response to vaccination against COVID-19. Conclusions: Monitoring and assessing the influence factors for the response to vaccination can be favourable strategies to further manage societal vaccination rates. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/76789
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