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Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: COVID-19 has imposed burdens on public health systems globally. Owing to the urgency of vaccination, this study aimed at comparing the differences in preference and willingness to pay of COVID-19 vaccine among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults. METHODS: A...

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Autores principales: Li, Xialei, Yang, Liujun, Tian, Guanghua, Feng, Bojunhao, Jia, Xiaocen, He, Zonglin, Liu, Taoran, Zhao, Xianqi, Huang, Mengjie, Yu, Wenli, Yu, Lian, Ming, Wai-Kit
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10060971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37006586
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1067218
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author Li, Xialei
Yang, Liujun
Tian, Guanghua
Feng, Bojunhao
Jia, Xiaocen
He, Zonglin
Liu, Taoran
Zhao, Xianqi
Huang, Mengjie
Yu, Wenli
Yu, Lian
Ming, Wai-Kit
author_facet Li, Xialei
Yang, Liujun
Tian, Guanghua
Feng, Bojunhao
Jia, Xiaocen
He, Zonglin
Liu, Taoran
Zhao, Xianqi
Huang, Mengjie
Yu, Wenli
Yu, Lian
Ming, Wai-Kit
author_sort Li, Xialei
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: COVID-19 has imposed burdens on public health systems globally. Owing to the urgency of vaccination, this study aimed at comparing the differences in preference and willingness to pay of COVID-19 vaccine among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey containing demographic questions, rating their acceptance of COVID-19 vaccination with and without recommendations from friends, family members or employers (the social cues referred to in our study), and a discrete choice experiment understanding COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness to pay was conducted to collect data. Propensity score matching was utilized to adjust confounding factors of baseline characteristics and the relative importance of respondents' preference for each attribute and its level was estimated using a conditional logit model. Then, willingness to pay was calculated. RESULTS: In total, 3,494 (2,311 and 1,183 from China and the United States, respectively) completed the questionnaire, among which 3,444 questionnaires were effective. After propensity score matching, 1,604 respondents with 802 from the US and 802 from China were included. Under the influence of the social cues, Chinese respondents' vaccine acceptance decreased from 71.70 to 70.70%, while American respondents' vaccine acceptance increased from 74.69 to 75.81%. The discrete choice experiment showed that American respondents regarded the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccine as the most important attribute, whereas Chinese respondents attached the highest importance to the cost of vaccination. But overall, the COVID-19 vaccine with the higher efficacy, the milder adverse effect, the lower cost, and the longer duration will promote the preference of the public in both countries. Additionally, the public were willing to spend the most money for a reduction in COVID-19 vaccine adverse effect from moderate to very mild (37.476USD for the United States, 140.503USD for China), followed by paying for the 1% improvement in its efficacy and paying for the one-month extension of its duration. CONCLUSION: Given the impact of social cues on vaccine acceptance, Chinese government should promote reasonable vaccine-related information to improve national vaccination acceptance. Meanwhile, considering the influence of COVID-19 attributes on public preference and willingness to pay, regulating the vaccine pricing, improving the efficacy of the vaccine, reducing its adverse effect, and prolonging the duration of the vaccine works will contribute to vaccine uptake.
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spelling pubmed-100609712023-03-31 Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study Li, Xialei Yang, Liujun Tian, Guanghua Feng, Bojunhao Jia, Xiaocen He, Zonglin Liu, Taoran Zhao, Xianqi Huang, Mengjie Yu, Wenli Yu, Lian Ming, Wai-Kit Front Public Health Public Health BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: COVID-19 has imposed burdens on public health systems globally. Owing to the urgency of vaccination, this study aimed at comparing the differences in preference and willingness to pay of COVID-19 vaccine among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey containing demographic questions, rating their acceptance of COVID-19 vaccination with and without recommendations from friends, family members or employers (the social cues referred to in our study), and a discrete choice experiment understanding COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness to pay was conducted to collect data. Propensity score matching was utilized to adjust confounding factors of baseline characteristics and the relative importance of respondents' preference for each attribute and its level was estimated using a conditional logit model. Then, willingness to pay was calculated. RESULTS: In total, 3,494 (2,311 and 1,183 from China and the United States, respectively) completed the questionnaire, among which 3,444 questionnaires were effective. After propensity score matching, 1,604 respondents with 802 from the US and 802 from China were included. Under the influence of the social cues, Chinese respondents' vaccine acceptance decreased from 71.70 to 70.70%, while American respondents' vaccine acceptance increased from 74.69 to 75.81%. The discrete choice experiment showed that American respondents regarded the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccine as the most important attribute, whereas Chinese respondents attached the highest importance to the cost of vaccination. But overall, the COVID-19 vaccine with the higher efficacy, the milder adverse effect, the lower cost, and the longer duration will promote the preference of the public in both countries. Additionally, the public were willing to spend the most money for a reduction in COVID-19 vaccine adverse effect from moderate to very mild (37.476USD for the United States, 140.503USD for China), followed by paying for the 1% improvement in its efficacy and paying for the one-month extension of its duration. CONCLUSION: Given the impact of social cues on vaccine acceptance, Chinese government should promote reasonable vaccine-related information to improve national vaccination acceptance. Meanwhile, considering the influence of COVID-19 attributes on public preference and willingness to pay, regulating the vaccine pricing, improving the efficacy of the vaccine, reducing its adverse effect, and prolonging the duration of the vaccine works will contribute to vaccine uptake. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10060971/ /pubmed/37006586 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1067218 Text en Copyright © 2023 Li, Yang, Tian, Feng, Jia, He, Liu, Zhao, Huang, Yu, Yu and Ming. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Public Health
Li, Xialei
Yang, Liujun
Tian, Guanghua
Feng, Bojunhao
Jia, Xiaocen
He, Zonglin
Liu, Taoran
Zhao, Xianqi
Huang, Mengjie
Yu, Wenli
Yu, Lian
Ming, Wai-Kit
Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study
title Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study
title_full Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study
title_fullStr Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study
title_full_unstemmed Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study
title_short Understanding influencing attributes of COVID-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among Chinese and American middle-aged and elderly adults: A discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study
title_sort understanding influencing attributes of covid-19 vaccine preference and willingness-to-pay among chinese and american middle-aged and elderly adults: a discrete choice experiment and propensity score matching study
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10060971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37006586
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1067218
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