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COVID ‐19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy among Australians with disability and long‐term health conditions

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COVID ‐19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy among Australians with disability and long‐term health conditions. / Aitken, Zoe; Emerson, Eric; Kavanagh, Anne Marie.
In: Health Promotion Journal of Australia, Vol. 34, No. 4, 31.10.2023, p. 895-902.

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Aitken Z, Emerson E, Kavanagh AM. COVID ‐19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy among Australians with disability and long‐term health conditions. Health Promotion Journal of Australia. 2023 Oct 31;34(4):895-902. Epub 2023 Jan 11. doi: 10.1002/hpja.691

Author

Aitken, Zoe ; Emerson, Eric ; Kavanagh, Anne Marie. / COVID ‐19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy among Australians with disability and long‐term health conditions. In: Health Promotion Journal of Australia. 2023 ; Vol. 34, No. 4. pp. 895-902.

Bibtex

@article{0575224e691442fcaa113466b1b54410,
title = "COVID ‐19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy among Australians with disability and long‐term health conditions",
abstract = "COVID-19 vaccination is the cornerstone of managing Australia's COVID-19 pandemic and the success of the vaccination program depends on high vaccination coverage. This paper examined differences in COVID-19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy for people with disability, long-term health conditions, and carers - subgroups that were prioritised in Australia's vaccination program. Using data from 2,400 Australians who participated in two waves of the Taking the Pulse of the Nation survey in April and May 2021, we described vaccination coverage and hesitancy among people with disability, severe mental health conditions, severe long-term health conditions, frequent need for assistance with everyday activities, and carers. Vaccination coverage was estimated to be 8.2% in the sample overall and was similar for people with disability, those with frequent need for assistance, and carers. It was higher for people with severe long-term health conditions (13.4%) and lower for people with severe mental health conditions (4.3%). Vaccine hesitancy was high overall (35.6%) and was similarly high across the priority groups, with only small differences for people with disability, severe long-term health conditions and frequent need for assistance. This study highlights a lack of difference in vaccination coverage for people with disability, long-term health conditions, and carers compared to the general population. SO WHAT?: Sub-optimal vaccination coverage for people in the priority groups leaves many people at significant risk of serious disease or death if exposed to COVID-19, particularly in light of easing of disease-control restrictions across Australia and the emergence of new variants. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. [Abstract copyright: This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.]",
keywords = "COVID-19, chronic disease, disabled persons, health inequities, vaccination coverage, vaccination hesitancy",
author = "Zoe Aitken and Eric Emerson and Kavanagh, {Anne Marie}",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1002/hpja.691",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "895--902",
journal = "Health Promotion Journal of Australia",
issn = "1036-1073",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - COVID ‐19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy among Australians with disability and long‐term health conditions

AU - Aitken, Zoe

AU - Emerson, Eric

AU - Kavanagh, Anne Marie

PY - 2023/10/31

Y1 - 2023/10/31

N2 - COVID-19 vaccination is the cornerstone of managing Australia's COVID-19 pandemic and the success of the vaccination program depends on high vaccination coverage. This paper examined differences in COVID-19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy for people with disability, long-term health conditions, and carers - subgroups that were prioritised in Australia's vaccination program. Using data from 2,400 Australians who participated in two waves of the Taking the Pulse of the Nation survey in April and May 2021, we described vaccination coverage and hesitancy among people with disability, severe mental health conditions, severe long-term health conditions, frequent need for assistance with everyday activities, and carers. Vaccination coverage was estimated to be 8.2% in the sample overall and was similar for people with disability, those with frequent need for assistance, and carers. It was higher for people with severe long-term health conditions (13.4%) and lower for people with severe mental health conditions (4.3%). Vaccine hesitancy was high overall (35.6%) and was similarly high across the priority groups, with only small differences for people with disability, severe long-term health conditions and frequent need for assistance. This study highlights a lack of difference in vaccination coverage for people with disability, long-term health conditions, and carers compared to the general population. SO WHAT?: Sub-optimal vaccination coverage for people in the priority groups leaves many people at significant risk of serious disease or death if exposed to COVID-19, particularly in light of easing of disease-control restrictions across Australia and the emergence of new variants. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. [Abstract copyright: This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.]

AB - COVID-19 vaccination is the cornerstone of managing Australia's COVID-19 pandemic and the success of the vaccination program depends on high vaccination coverage. This paper examined differences in COVID-19 vaccination coverage and vaccine hesitancy for people with disability, long-term health conditions, and carers - subgroups that were prioritised in Australia's vaccination program. Using data from 2,400 Australians who participated in two waves of the Taking the Pulse of the Nation survey in April and May 2021, we described vaccination coverage and hesitancy among people with disability, severe mental health conditions, severe long-term health conditions, frequent need for assistance with everyday activities, and carers. Vaccination coverage was estimated to be 8.2% in the sample overall and was similar for people with disability, those with frequent need for assistance, and carers. It was higher for people with severe long-term health conditions (13.4%) and lower for people with severe mental health conditions (4.3%). Vaccine hesitancy was high overall (35.6%) and was similarly high across the priority groups, with only small differences for people with disability, severe long-term health conditions and frequent need for assistance. This study highlights a lack of difference in vaccination coverage for people with disability, long-term health conditions, and carers compared to the general population. SO WHAT?: Sub-optimal vaccination coverage for people in the priority groups leaves many people at significant risk of serious disease or death if exposed to COVID-19, particularly in light of easing of disease-control restrictions across Australia and the emergence of new variants. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. [Abstract copyright: This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.]

KW - COVID-19

KW - chronic disease

KW - disabled persons

KW - health inequities

KW - vaccination coverage

KW - vaccination hesitancy

U2 - 10.1002/hpja.691

DO - 10.1002/hpja.691

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36565293

VL - 34

SP - 895

EP - 902

JO - Health Promotion Journal of Australia

JF - Health Promotion Journal of Australia

SN - 1036-1073

IS - 4

ER -