A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Community Perceptions of Flu and COVID-19 Vaccines at Turtle Creek Primary Care Center.

Community health equity research & policy Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-14 DOI:10.1177/2752535X231205665
Anjana Murali, Jorna Sojati, Marina Levochkina, Catherine Pressimone, Kobi Griffith, Erica Fan, Allie Dakroub
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Abstract

Background: Influenza (flu) and COVID-19 vaccination rates are subpar across the US, especially in racial and/or socioeconomic minority groups who are understudied in public health literature.

Objective: The objective of this mixed-methods study was to elucidate attitudes of patients at the Turtle Creek Primary Care Center, a clinic that cares for ∼70% non-white patients, towards flu and COVID-19 vaccines, with the goal of establishing vaccine education gaps and increasing vaccine uptake in minority communities.

Design/patients: This study was conducted as a cross-sectional analysis. Authors completed 123 patient phone surveys of patients cared for at the Turtle Creek clinic inquiring about flu and COVID-19 infection status and vaccination uptake (August 26-October 10, 2021).

Approach/key results: We found that rates of vaccination were subpar in the Turtle Creek community, with only 54% having received the COVID-19 vaccine and only 44% receiving the flu vaccine regularly. There was a strong association between COVID-19 and flu vaccine acceptance and a notable correlation between vaccine acceptance and age. When assessing how vaccine acceptance was influenced by trusted sources of information, those who cited trusting "medical professionals" and "word of mouth" had higher odds of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance but those who cited trusting "social media" had decreased odds of acceptance. Finally, we uncovered 14 common factors for either vaccine acceptance or refusal that clustered into four overarching themes of trust, need, safety, and availability.

Conclusion: These data highlight the necessity of improved vaccine education and reveal targetable populations and approaches for disseminating vaccine information.

Turtle Creek初级保健中心社区对流感和新冠肺炎疫苗认知的跨部门分析。
背景:流感和新冠肺炎疫苗接种率在美国各地都不高,尤其是在公共卫生文献研究不足的种族和/或社会经济少数群体中。目的:这项混合方法研究的目的是阐明Turtle Creek初级保健中心(一家护理约70%非白人患者的诊所)的患者对流感和新冠肺炎疫苗的态度,目的是建立疫苗教育差距,提高少数族裔社区的疫苗接种率。设计/患者:本研究作为横断面分析进行。作者对Turtle Creek诊所护理的123名患者进行了电话调查,询问流感和新冠肺炎感染状况和疫苗接种情况(2021年8月26日至10月10日)。方法/关键结果:我们发现Turtle Creeke社区的疫苗接种率较低,只有54%的人接种了新冠肺炎疫苗,只有44%的人定期接种流感疫苗。新冠肺炎与流感疫苗接受度之间有很强的相关性,疫苗接受度与年龄之间有显著的相关性。在评估疫苗接受度如何受到可信信息来源的影响时,那些引用信任“医疗专业人员”和“口口相传”的人接受新冠肺炎疫苗的几率更高,但那些引用信任的“社交媒体”的人被接受的几率更低。最后,我们发现了接受或拒绝疫苗的14个常见因素,这些因素分为信任、需求、安全性和可用性四个总体主题。结论:这些数据强调了改进疫苗教育的必要性,并揭示了传播疫苗信息的目标人群和方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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