Individual-level factors associated with COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among U.S. patients with cancer
•86.8% of patients with cancer were accepting of the COVID-19 vaccine.•High vaccine accepters had more confidence in the effectiveness and safety of the vaccine.•Older age and greater perceived severity of COVID-19 increased vaccine acceptance.•Risk mitigation behaviors and receiving the flu shot in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Vaccine 2022-11, Vol.40 (46), p.6649-6657 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •86.8% of patients with cancer were accepting of the COVID-19 vaccine.•High vaccine accepters had more confidence in the effectiveness and safety of the vaccine.•Older age and greater perceived severity of COVID-19 increased vaccine acceptance.•Risk mitigation behaviors and receiving the flu shot increased vaccine acceptance.
Vaccine hesitancy in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic is a major public health concern in the US. Cancer patients are especially vulnerable to adverse COVID-19 outcomes and require targeted prevention efforts against COVID-19.
We used longitudinal survey data from patients seen at Moffitt Cancer Center to identify attitudes, beliefs, and sociodemographic factors associated with COVID-19 vaccination acceptance among cancer patients. Patients with confirmed invasive cancer diagnosis through Cancer Registry data were asked about vaccine acceptance through the question “Now that a COVID-19 vaccine is available, are you likely to get it?” and dichotomized into high accepters (already received it, would get it when available) and low accepters (waiting for a doctor to recommend it, waiting until more people received it, not likely to get it).
Most patients (86.8% of 5,814) were high accepters of the COVID-19 vaccine. High accepters had more confidence in the effectiveness and safety of the vaccine than low accepters. Multivariable logistic regression showed older individuals (70–89 vs.18–49: OR:2.57, 95% CI:1.33–4.86), those with greater perceived severity of COVID-19 infection (very serious vs. not at all serious: OR:2.55, 95% CI:1.76–3.70), practicing more risk mitigation behaviors (per one standard deviation OR:1.75, 95% CI:1.57–1.95), and history of receiving the flu shot versus not (OR:6.56, 95% CI:5.25–8.20) had higher odds of vaccine acceptance. Individuals living with more than one other person (vs. alone: OR: 0.53, 95% CI: 0.35, 0.79) and those who were more socioeconomically disadvantaged (per 10 percentile points: OR: 0.89, 95 %CI: 0.85, 0.93) had lower odds of reporting vaccine acceptance.
Most patients with cancer have or would receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Those who are less likely to accept the vaccine have more concerns regarding effectiveness and side effects, are younger, more socioeconomically disadvantaged, and have lower perceptions of COVID-19 severity. |
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ISSN: | 0264-410X 1873-2518 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.vaccine.2022.09.063 |