Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort

COVID-19 vaccines are crucial for achieving sufficient immunisation coverage to manage the pandemic, but vaccine hesitancy persists. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and determinants of vaccine hesitancy in adults and in parents for vaccinating their children using an integrated social...

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Main Authors: Griva, Konstantina, Tan, Kevin Y. K., Chan, Frederick H. F., Periakaruppan, Ramanathan, Ong, Brenda W. L., Soh, Alexius S. E., Chen, Mark I. C.
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160525
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1605252023-03-05T16:52:15Z Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort Griva, Konstantina Tan, Kevin Y. K. Chan, Frederick H. F. Periakaruppan, Ramanathan Ong, Brenda W. L. Soh, Alexius S. E. Chen, Mark I. C. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Science::Medicine Vaccine Hesitancy Parental Hesitancy COVID-19 vaccines are crucial for achieving sufficient immunisation coverage to manage the pandemic, but vaccine hesitancy persists. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and determinants of vaccine hesitancy in adults and in parents for vaccinating their children using an integrated social cognition model. A community-based cohort in Singapore [N = 1623] completed a survey (wave 25) between June and July 2021 which measured their risk perceptions, distress, trust, vaccination beliefs, and vaccine intentions/behaviours. Results indicated low rates of hesitancy (9.9%) for own vaccination, with most concerns citing side effects, safety, and hasty development. Remaining respondents were vaccinated (69%) or intended to vaccinate (21%). The multivariable model (non-vaccinated respondents) indicated that, living with people in poor health, subjective norm, moral norm, benefits, and necessity of vaccination were associated with lower vaccine hesitancy (R2 Cox & Snell: 51.4%; p < 0.001). Hesitancy rates were higher for children's vaccination (15.9%), with male gender, lower perceived vaccine benefits, high COVID-19 risk perceptions, vaccination concerns, and necessity beliefs associated with higher odds of parental vaccine hesitancy (R2 Cox & Snell = 36.4%; p < 0.001). While levels of vaccine acceptance are high, more targeted messages are needed. For adults' vaccination, more emphasis should be on benefits and social gains, while for parental hesitancy, messages related to safety should be prioritised. Published version This research was funded by estate of the late Irene Tan Liang Kheng. 2022-07-26T05:18:30Z 2022-07-26T05:18:30Z 2021 Journal Article Griva, K., Tan, K. Y. K., Chan, F. H. F., Periakaruppan, R., Ong, B. W. L., Soh, A. S. E. & Chen, M. I. C. (2021). Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort. Vaccines, 9(12), 1415-. https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9121415 2076-393X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160525 10.3390/vaccines9121415 34960161 2-s2.0-85120799533 12 9 1415 en Vaccines © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Medicine
Vaccine Hesitancy
Parental Hesitancy
spellingShingle Science::Medicine
Vaccine Hesitancy
Parental Hesitancy
Griva, Konstantina
Tan, Kevin Y. K.
Chan, Frederick H. F.
Periakaruppan, Ramanathan
Ong, Brenda W. L.
Soh, Alexius S. E.
Chen, Mark I. C.
Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort
description COVID-19 vaccines are crucial for achieving sufficient immunisation coverage to manage the pandemic, but vaccine hesitancy persists. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and determinants of vaccine hesitancy in adults and in parents for vaccinating their children using an integrated social cognition model. A community-based cohort in Singapore [N = 1623] completed a survey (wave 25) between June and July 2021 which measured their risk perceptions, distress, trust, vaccination beliefs, and vaccine intentions/behaviours. Results indicated low rates of hesitancy (9.9%) for own vaccination, with most concerns citing side effects, safety, and hasty development. Remaining respondents were vaccinated (69%) or intended to vaccinate (21%). The multivariable model (non-vaccinated respondents) indicated that, living with people in poor health, subjective norm, moral norm, benefits, and necessity of vaccination were associated with lower vaccine hesitancy (R2 Cox & Snell: 51.4%; p < 0.001). Hesitancy rates were higher for children's vaccination (15.9%), with male gender, lower perceived vaccine benefits, high COVID-19 risk perceptions, vaccination concerns, and necessity beliefs associated with higher odds of parental vaccine hesitancy (R2 Cox & Snell = 36.4%; p < 0.001). While levels of vaccine acceptance are high, more targeted messages are needed. For adults' vaccination, more emphasis should be on benefits and social gains, while for parental hesitancy, messages related to safety should be prioritised.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Griva, Konstantina
Tan, Kevin Y. K.
Chan, Frederick H. F.
Periakaruppan, Ramanathan
Ong, Brenda W. L.
Soh, Alexius S. E.
Chen, Mark I. C.
format Article
author Griva, Konstantina
Tan, Kevin Y. K.
Chan, Frederick H. F.
Periakaruppan, Ramanathan
Ong, Brenda W. L.
Soh, Alexius S. E.
Chen, Mark I. C.
author_sort Griva, Konstantina
title Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort
title_short Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort
title_full Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort
title_fullStr Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating rates and determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the Singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (SOCRATEs) cohort
title_sort evaluating rates and determinants of covid-19 vaccine hesitancy for adults and children in the singapore population: strengthening our community's resilience against threats from emerging infections (socrates) cohort
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/160525
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