Vaccines (Jul 2022)

Acceptance Rates of COVID-19 Vaccine Highlight the Need for Targeted Public Health Interventions

  • Vered Shkalim Zemer,
  • Zachi Grossman,
  • Herman Avner Cohen,
  • Moshe Hoshen,
  • Maya Gerstein,
  • Noga Yosef,
  • Moriya Cohen,
  • Shai Ashkenazi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10081167
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 1167

Abstract

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We aimed to examine rates of COVID-19 vaccination to elucidate the need for targeted public health interventions. We retrospectively reviewed the electronic medical files of all adults registered in a central district in Israel from 1 January 2021 to 31 March 2022. The population was characterized by vaccination status against COVID-19 and the number of doses received. Univariate and multivariable analyses were used to identify predictors of low vaccination rates that required targeted interventions. Of the 246,543 subjects included in the study, 207,911 (84.3%) were vaccinated. The minority groups of ultra-Orthodox Jews and Arabs had lower vaccination rates than the non-ultra-Orthodox Jews (68.7%, 80.5% and 87.7%, respectively, p p p p < 0.001) associated with low vaccination rates: minority groups of the ultra-Orthodox sector and Arab population, and underlying conditions of asthma, smoking and diabetes mellitus (odds ratios: 0.484, 0.453, 0.843, 0.901 and 0.929, respectively). Specific targeted public health interventions towards these subpopulations with significantly lower rates of vaccination are suggested.

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