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Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020

OBJECTIVES: Across diverse ethnic groups in the UK, explore attitudes and intentions towards COVID-19 vaccination and sources of COVID-19 information. DESIGN: Remote qualitative interviews and focus groups (FGs) conducted June–October 2020 before UK COVID-19 vaccine approval. Data were transcribed a...

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Autores principales: Sides, Eirwen, Jones, Leah Ffion, Kamal, Atiya, Thomas, Amy, Syeda, Rowshonara, Kaissi, Awatif, Lecky, Donna M, Patel, Mahendra, Nellums, Laura, Greenway, Jane, Campos-Matos, Ines, Shukla, Rashmi, Brown, Colin S, Pareek, Manish, Sollars, Loretta, Pawson, Emma, McNulty, Cliodna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9437733/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36581971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-060992
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author Sides, Eirwen
Jones, Leah Ffion
Kamal, Atiya
Thomas, Amy
Syeda, Rowshonara
Kaissi, Awatif
Lecky, Donna M
Patel, Mahendra
Nellums, Laura
Greenway, Jane
Campos-Matos, Ines
Shukla, Rashmi
Brown, Colin S
Pareek, Manish
Sollars, Loretta
Pawson, Emma
McNulty, Cliodna
author_facet Sides, Eirwen
Jones, Leah Ffion
Kamal, Atiya
Thomas, Amy
Syeda, Rowshonara
Kaissi, Awatif
Lecky, Donna M
Patel, Mahendra
Nellums, Laura
Greenway, Jane
Campos-Matos, Ines
Shukla, Rashmi
Brown, Colin S
Pareek, Manish
Sollars, Loretta
Pawson, Emma
McNulty, Cliodna
author_sort Sides, Eirwen
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Across diverse ethnic groups in the UK, explore attitudes and intentions towards COVID-19 vaccination and sources of COVID-19 information. DESIGN: Remote qualitative interviews and focus groups (FGs) conducted June–October 2020 before UK COVID-19 vaccine approval. Data were transcribed and analysed through inductive thematic analysis and mapped to the Theoretical Domains Framework. SETTING: England and Wales. PARTICIPANTS: 100 participants from 19 self-identified ethnic groups. RESULTS: Mistrust and doubt were reported across ethnic groups. Many participants shared concerns about perceived lack of information about COVID-19 vaccine safety and efficacy. There were differences within each ethnic group, with factors such as occupation and perceived health status influencing intention to accept a vaccine once made available. Across ethnic groups, participants believed that public contact occupations, older adults and vulnerable groups should be prioritised for vaccination. Perceived risk, social influences, occupation, age, comorbidities and engagement with healthcare influenced participants’ intentions to accept vaccination once available. All Jewish FG participants intended to accept, while all Traveller FG participants indicated they probably would not. Facilitators to COVID-19 vaccine uptake across ethnic groups included: desire to return to normality and protect health and well-being; perceived higher risk of infection; evidence of vaccine safety and efficacy; vaccine availability and accessibility. COVID-19 information sources were influenced by social factors and included: friends and family; media and news outlets; research literature; and culture and religion. Participants across most different ethnic groups were concerned about misinformation or had negative attitudes towards the media. CONCLUSIONS: During vaccination rollout, including boosters, commissioners and providers should provide accurate information, authentic community outreach and use appropriate channels to disseminate information and counter misinformation. Adopting a context-specific approach to vaccine resources, interventions and policies and empowering communities has potential to increase trust in the programme.
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spelling pubmed-94377332022-09-02 Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020 Sides, Eirwen Jones, Leah Ffion Kamal, Atiya Thomas, Amy Syeda, Rowshonara Kaissi, Awatif Lecky, Donna M Patel, Mahendra Nellums, Laura Greenway, Jane Campos-Matos, Ines Shukla, Rashmi Brown, Colin S Pareek, Manish Sollars, Loretta Pawson, Emma McNulty, Cliodna BMJ Open Public Health OBJECTIVES: Across diverse ethnic groups in the UK, explore attitudes and intentions towards COVID-19 vaccination and sources of COVID-19 information. DESIGN: Remote qualitative interviews and focus groups (FGs) conducted June–October 2020 before UK COVID-19 vaccine approval. Data were transcribed and analysed through inductive thematic analysis and mapped to the Theoretical Domains Framework. SETTING: England and Wales. PARTICIPANTS: 100 participants from 19 self-identified ethnic groups. RESULTS: Mistrust and doubt were reported across ethnic groups. Many participants shared concerns about perceived lack of information about COVID-19 vaccine safety and efficacy. There were differences within each ethnic group, with factors such as occupation and perceived health status influencing intention to accept a vaccine once made available. Across ethnic groups, participants believed that public contact occupations, older adults and vulnerable groups should be prioritised for vaccination. Perceived risk, social influences, occupation, age, comorbidities and engagement with healthcare influenced participants’ intentions to accept vaccination once available. All Jewish FG participants intended to accept, while all Traveller FG participants indicated they probably would not. Facilitators to COVID-19 vaccine uptake across ethnic groups included: desire to return to normality and protect health and well-being; perceived higher risk of infection; evidence of vaccine safety and efficacy; vaccine availability and accessibility. COVID-19 information sources were influenced by social factors and included: friends and family; media and news outlets; research literature; and culture and religion. Participants across most different ethnic groups were concerned about misinformation or had negative attitudes towards the media. CONCLUSIONS: During vaccination rollout, including boosters, commissioners and providers should provide accurate information, authentic community outreach and use appropriate channels to disseminate information and counter misinformation. Adopting a context-specific approach to vaccine resources, interventions and policies and empowering communities has potential to increase trust in the programme. BMJ Publishing Group 2022-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9437733/ /pubmed/36581971 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-060992 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Public Health
Sides, Eirwen
Jones, Leah Ffion
Kamal, Atiya
Thomas, Amy
Syeda, Rowshonara
Kaissi, Awatif
Lecky, Donna M
Patel, Mahendra
Nellums, Laura
Greenway, Jane
Campos-Matos, Ines
Shukla, Rashmi
Brown, Colin S
Pareek, Manish
Sollars, Loretta
Pawson, Emma
McNulty, Cliodna
Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020
title Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020
title_full Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020
title_fullStr Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020
title_short Attitudes towards coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the UK: a qualitative study from June to October 2020
title_sort attitudes towards coronavirus (covid-19) vaccine and sources of information across diverse ethnic groups in the uk: a qualitative study from june to october 2020
topic Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9437733/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36581971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-060992
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