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Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements

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Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements. / Aguilar Ticona, Juan P.; Nery Jr., Nivison; Victoriano, Renato et al.
In: Vaccines, Vol. 9, 951, 26.08.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Aguilar Ticona, JP, Nery Jr., N, Victoriano, R, Fofana, MO, Ribeiro, GS, Giorgi, E, Reis, MG, Ko, AI & Costa, F 2021, 'Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements', Vaccines, vol. 9, 951. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9090951

APA

Aguilar Ticona, J. P., Nery Jr., N., Victoriano, R., Fofana, M. O., Ribeiro, G. S., Giorgi, E., Reis, M. G., Ko, A. I., & Costa, F. (2021). Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements. Vaccines, 9, Article 951. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9090951

Vancouver

Aguilar Ticona JP, Nery Jr. N, Victoriano R, Fofana MO, Ribeiro GS, Giorgi E et al. Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements. Vaccines. 2021 Aug 26;9:951. doi: 10.3390/vaccines9090951

Author

Aguilar Ticona, Juan P. ; Nery Jr., Nivison ; Victoriano, Renato et al. / Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements. In: Vaccines. 2021 ; Vol. 9.

Bibtex

@article{6bd28edccf1546b497ffe0a460d64540,
title = "Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements",
abstract = "Slum residents are more vulnerable to COVID-19 infection. Without a specific treatment, vaccination became the main strategy against COVID-19. In this study, we determined the rate and factors associated with the willingness to get vaccinated against COVID-19 among slum residents and their main reasons associated with the vaccine intention. The study was conducted in Pau da Lima, a slum community in Salvador Brazil. In total, 985 residents were interviewed. Among them 66.0% (650/985) were willing to get vaccinated, 26.1% (257/985) were hesitant to take the vaccine and 7.9% (78/285) were not sure. The main reasons cited for vaccine hesitancy or being unsure were concerns about vaccine efficacy and potential side effects. In contrast, the main reasons cited for wanting the vaccine were the high incidence of COVID-19 cases and participants{\textquoteright} self-perception of their own health history. Multivariate analysis identified that COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was associated with younger age and low social capital, summarized as low perceived importance of vaccination to protect one{\textquoteright}s family, friends and community. Slum residents have been less willing to vaccinate than the general population. Social capital presents a critical opportunity in the design of communication campaigns to increase COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in slum settings.",
keywords = "COVID-19, vaccine, vaccine hesitancy",
author = "{Aguilar Ticona}, {Juan P.} and {Nery Jr.}, Nivison and Renato Victoriano and Fofana, {Mariam O.} and Ribeiro, {Guilherme S.} and Emanuele Giorgi and Reis, {Mitermayer G.} and Ko, {Albert I.} and Federico Costa",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
day = "26",
doi = "10.3390/vaccines9090951",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Vaccines",
issn = "2076-393X",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Willingness to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine among Residents of Slum Settlements

AU - Aguilar Ticona, Juan P.

AU - Nery Jr., Nivison

AU - Victoriano, Renato

AU - Fofana, Mariam O.

AU - Ribeiro, Guilherme S.

AU - Giorgi, Emanuele

AU - Reis, Mitermayer G.

AU - Ko, Albert I.

AU - Costa, Federico

PY - 2021/8/26

Y1 - 2021/8/26

N2 - Slum residents are more vulnerable to COVID-19 infection. Without a specific treatment, vaccination became the main strategy against COVID-19. In this study, we determined the rate and factors associated with the willingness to get vaccinated against COVID-19 among slum residents and their main reasons associated with the vaccine intention. The study was conducted in Pau da Lima, a slum community in Salvador Brazil. In total, 985 residents were interviewed. Among them 66.0% (650/985) were willing to get vaccinated, 26.1% (257/985) were hesitant to take the vaccine and 7.9% (78/285) were not sure. The main reasons cited for vaccine hesitancy or being unsure were concerns about vaccine efficacy and potential side effects. In contrast, the main reasons cited for wanting the vaccine were the high incidence of COVID-19 cases and participants’ self-perception of their own health history. Multivariate analysis identified that COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was associated with younger age and low social capital, summarized as low perceived importance of vaccination to protect one’s family, friends and community. Slum residents have been less willing to vaccinate than the general population. Social capital presents a critical opportunity in the design of communication campaigns to increase COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in slum settings.

AB - Slum residents are more vulnerable to COVID-19 infection. Without a specific treatment, vaccination became the main strategy against COVID-19. In this study, we determined the rate and factors associated with the willingness to get vaccinated against COVID-19 among slum residents and their main reasons associated with the vaccine intention. The study was conducted in Pau da Lima, a slum community in Salvador Brazil. In total, 985 residents were interviewed. Among them 66.0% (650/985) were willing to get vaccinated, 26.1% (257/985) were hesitant to take the vaccine and 7.9% (78/285) were not sure. The main reasons cited for vaccine hesitancy or being unsure were concerns about vaccine efficacy and potential side effects. In contrast, the main reasons cited for wanting the vaccine were the high incidence of COVID-19 cases and participants’ self-perception of their own health history. Multivariate analysis identified that COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was associated with younger age and low social capital, summarized as low perceived importance of vaccination to protect one’s family, friends and community. Slum residents have been less willing to vaccinate than the general population. Social capital presents a critical opportunity in the design of communication campaigns to increase COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in slum settings.

KW - COVID-19

KW - vaccine

KW - vaccine hesitancy

U2 - 10.3390/vaccines9090951

DO - 10.3390/vaccines9090951

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

JO - Vaccines

JF - Vaccines

SN - 2076-393X

M1 - 951

ER -