Vaccines (Jun 2023)

Decrease in Overall Vaccine Hesitancy in College Students during the COVID-19 Pandemic

  • Kendall Pogue,
  • Jessica D. Altman,
  • Abigail A. Lee,
  • Dashiell S. Miner,
  • Ty J. Skyles,
  • Ruth J. Bodily,
  • Triston B. Crook,
  • Bryce U. Nielson,
  • Kaitlyn Hinton,
  • Lydia Busacker,
  • Zoe E. Mecham,
  • Agnes M. Rose,
  • Scott Black,
  • Brian D. Poole

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11071132
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1132

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic changed our world as we know it and continues to be a global problem three years since the pandemic began. Several vaccines were produced, but there was a considerable amount of societal turmoil surrounding them that has affected the way people view not only COVID-19 vaccines but all vaccines. We used a survey to compare how attitudes towards vaccination have changed in college students during the pandemic. An initial survey was administered in 2021, then a follow-up in 2022. Out of 316 respondents who answered the first survey, 192 completed the follow-up. The survey was designed to measure trends in changes to vaccine attitudes since the COVID-19 pandemic began. By comparing the first survey in 2021 and the follow-up, we found that roughly 55% of respondents’ vaccine attitudes did not change, roughly 44% of respondents’ attitudes towards vaccines became more positive, and only about 1% of the respondents’ vaccine attitudes became more negative. Improved view of vaccines was associated with political views and increased trust in medicine and the healthcare system. Worsened opinions of vaccines were associated with a belief that the COVID-19 vaccine affected fertility.

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