Vaccines (Mar 2023)

Profiles of People Who Carried Out Late Primary Vaccination against COVID-19 in the Region of Murcia

  • Amaya Bernal-Alonso,
  • María Cruz Gómez-Moreno,
  • Matilde Zornoza-Moreno,
  • María Belén Laorden-Ochando,
  • Francisca Isabel Tornel-Miñarro,
  • Jaime Jesús Pérez-Martín

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11040732
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 732

Abstract

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Despite the impact of the COVID-19 vaccination, vaccine hesitancy is a matter of concern. Despite a lower disease incidence, people continue to start primo-vaccination late. The aim of this study is to characterize people late primo-vaccinated and the reasons that led them to start vaccination. A quantitative, descriptive and prospective study was performed on the basis of phone surveys of people vaccinated from February to May 2022 in the Region of Murcia (Spain). The survey included socio-demographic and COVID-19 information, self-perception risk, vaccine security, Fear of COVID-19 Scale, reasons for not being vaccinated and reasons that have led them to vaccination. From a total of 1768 people receiving primo-vaccination, 798 people were contacted, and 338 people completed the survey. Among the interviewed people, 57% reported non-health-related reasons to get vaccinated, travel reasons being the primary one. The most reported health-related reason was a fear of COVID-19. There was a significant positive association between vaccination for health-related reasons and female gender (β = 0.72), cohabiting with a vulnerable person (β = 0.97), higher self-perceived risk (β = 0.13) and vaccine security dimension (β = 0.14). We identified two different profiles of people with late COVID-19 primo-vaccination, with health-related or non-health-related reasons. This work can be useful in designing specific communication strategies.

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