Vaccines (Jul 2021)

COVID-19 Vaccination Acceptance and Hesitancy among Healthcare Workers in Germany

  • Christopher Holzmann-Littig,
  • Matthias Christoph Braunisch,
  • Peter Kranke,
  • Maria Popp,
  • Christian Seeber,
  • Falk Fichtner,
  • Bianca Littig,
  • Javier Carbajo-Lozoya,
  • Christine Allwang,
  • Tamara Frank,
  • Joerg Johannes Meerpohl,
  • Bernhard Haller,
  • Christoph Schmaderer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9070777
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 7
p. 777

Abstract

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Vaccination hesitancy is a threat to herd immunity. Healthcare workers (HCWs) play a key role in promoting Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination in the general population. We therefore aimed to provide data on COVID-19 vaccination acceptance/hesitancy among German HCWs. For this exploratory, cross-sectional study, an online survey was conducted in February 2021. The survey included 54 items on demographics; previous vaccination behavior; trust in vaccines, physicians, the pharmaceutical industry and health politics; fear of adverse effects; assumptions regarding the consequences of COVID-19; knowledge about vaccines; and information seeking behavior. Odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals were calculated and chi-square tests were performed. Four thousand five hundred surveys were analyzed. The overall vaccination acceptance was 91.7%. The age group ≤20 years showed the lowest vaccination acceptance. Factors associated with vaccination hesitancy were lack of trust in authorities and pharmaceutical companies. Attitudes among acquaintances were associated with vaccination hesitancy too. Participants with vaccination hesitancy more often obtained information about COVID-19 vaccines via messenger services or online video platforms and underperformed in the knowledge test. We found high acceptance amongst German HCWs. Several factors associated with vaccination hesitancy were identified which could be targeted in HCW vaccination campaigns.

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