Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Dec 2024)

The evolution of vaccine hesitancy through the COVID-19 pandemic: A semi-structured interview study on booster and bivalent doses

  • Jeanna Parsons Leigh,
  • Emily A. FitzGerald,
  • Stephana Julia Moss,
  • Michal S. Cherak,
  • Rebecca Brundin-Mather,
  • Alexandra Dodds,
  • Henry T. Stelfox,
  • Ève Dubé,
  • Kirsten M. Fiest,
  • Donna M. Halperin,
  • Sofia B. Ahmed,
  • Shannon E. MacDonald,
  • Sharon E. Straus,
  • Terra Manca,
  • Josh Ng Kamstra,
  • Andrea Soo,
  • Shelly Longmore,
  • Shelly Kupsch,
  • Bonnie Sept,
  • Scott A. Halperin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2024.2316417
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTWe sought in-depth understanding on the evolution of factors influencing COVID-19 booster dose and bivalent vaccine hesitancy in a longitudinal semi-structured interview-based qualitative study. Serial interviews were conducted between July 25th and September 1st, 2022 (Phase I: univalent booster dose availability), and between November 21st, 2022 and January 11th, 2023 (Phase II: bivalent vaccine availability). Adults (≥18 years) in Canada who had received an initial primary series and had not received a COVID-19 booster dose were eligible for Phase I, and subsequently invited to participate in Phase II. Twenty-two of twenty-three (96%) participants completed interviews for both phases (45 interviews). Nearly half of participants identified as a woman (n = 11), the median age was 37 years (interquartile range: 32–48), and most participants were employed full-time (n = 12); no participant reported needing to vaccinate (with a primary series) for their workplace. No participant reported having received a COVID-19 booster dose at the time of their interview in Phase II. Three themes relating to the development of hesitancy toward continued vaccination against COVID-19 were identified: 1) effectiveness (frequency concerns; infection despite vaccination); 2) necessity (less threatening, low urgency, alternate protective measures); and 3) information (need for data, contradiction and confusion, lack of trust, decreased motivation). The data from interviews with individuals who had not received a COVID-19 booster dose or bivalent vaccine despite having received a primary series of COVID-19 vaccines highlights actionable targets to address vaccine hesitancy and improve public health literacy.

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