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Patients’ Perspectives on Emergency Department COVID-19 Vaccination and Vaccination Messaging Through Randomized Vignettes

Authors :
Michael J. Waxman
Maile Ray
Elissa M. Schechter-Perkins
Kiran Faryar
Karen Coen Flynn
Mandi Breen
Susan M. Wojcik
Fiona Berry
Amy Zheng
Ashar Ata
E. Brooke Lerner
Michael S. Lyons
Sandra McGinnis
Source :
Public Health Reports. 137:774-781
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2022.

Abstract

Objectives: Emergency departments (EDs) could play an important role in the COVID-19 pandemic response by reaching patients who would otherwise not seek vaccination in the community. Prior to expanding COVID-19 vaccination to the acute care setting, we assessed ED patients’ COVID-19 vaccine status, perspectives, and hypothetical receptivity to ED-based vaccination. Methods: From January 11 through March 31, 2021, we conducted a multisite (Albany Medical Center, Boston Medical Center, Buffalo General Hospital, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, and Upstate Medical Center), cross-sectional survey of ED patients, with embedded randomization for participants to receive 1 of 4 vignette vaccination messages (simple opt-in message, recommendation by the hospital, community-oriented message, and acknowledgment of vaccine hesitancy). Main outcomes included COVID-19 vaccination status, prior intention to be vaccinated, and receptivity to randomized hypothetical vignette messages. Results: Of 610 participants, 122 (20.0%) were vaccinated, 234 (38.4%) had prior intent to be vaccinated, 111 (18.2%) were unsure as to prior intent, and 143 (23.4%) had no prior intent to be vaccinated. Vaccine hesitancy (participants who were vaccine unsure or did not intend to receive the vaccine) was associated with the following: age Conclusions: EDs have appropriate patient populations to initiate COVID-19 vaccination programs as a supplement to community efforts. A simple opt-in approach may offer the best messaging to reach vaccine-hesitant ED patients.

Details

ISSN :
14682877 and 00333549
Volume :
137
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Public Health Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....11032527c1713794c2adbd22e0450f03
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/00333549221085580