Laura Nicole Sisson, Catherine Tomko, Zhenglin Yuan, Katherine Haney, Emily Clouse, Katherine C Smith, Susan G Sherman
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Exploring the Role of Vaccine Confidence in COVID-19 Vaccination Among a Community-Based Sample of Women Who Use Drugs in Baltimore, Maryland.
Prevalence of COVID-19 vaccination among women who use drugs is largely unknown. Using a community-based sample, we explored correlates of COVID-19 vaccination stratified by level of vaccine confidence, measured by the widely used Vaccine Hesitancy Scale. Level of vaccine confidence was found to be significantly associated with uptake of the COVID-19 vaccine as well as recent flu vaccination. Poisson regression with robust variance was used to identify correlates of vaccination within both groups. Among higher-confidence women, vaccine uptake was associated with education and experiencing pandemic-related health care barriers and food insecurity, and likelihood of vaccination was lower among those who did not believe the vaccine was FDA-approved than among those who did. Among lower-confidence women, likelihood of vaccination was greater among Black women, those in shared housing, and drug treatment, but lower among those recruited from high-vaccination neighborhoods and who believed newer vaccines carry greater risk.
期刊介绍:
The journal has as its goal the dissemination of information on the health of, and health care for, low income and other medically underserved communities to health care practitioners, policy makers, and community leaders who are in a position to effect meaningful change. Issues dealt with include access to, quality of, and cost of health care.