No more than “half prevention”: A qualitative study on psychosocial determinants of Covid-19 vaccination acceptance.

Publication date: Jul 17, 2024

Vaccine hesitancy represents a major barrier to achieving Covid-19 vaccination coverage, including in Italy, where the vaccination rates suggest that Covid-19 vaccination has not been fully integrated into people’s routine immunization schedules. While quantitative studies have generated ample data on factors influencing vaccination decisions, rarely was an overall picture of people’s actual views and experiences with Covid-19 vaccines provided. To address this gap, this qualitative study aimed to explore, from a psychosocial perspective, the relationships between perceptions of Covid-19 vaccines, traditional vaccines, and general approaches to prevention. Following a Grounded Theory approach, we interviewed 25 Italian adults from different socioeconomic and working backgrounds. Findings revealed that, despite a generally positive attitude towards Covid-19 vaccines, they were often regarded as providing only partial protection-a “half prevention”-against the disease rather than a definitive preventive measure. In this sense, a gap emerged between the overall notion of prevention and the specific representations associated with Covid-19 vaccines. Therefore, to increase vaccination acceptance, interventions should prioritize the reduction of such a gap by promoting the idea that vaccination against Covid is, in all respects, a safe and effective preventive tool. This requires fostering a credible knowledge system and building trustful relationships among community members and stakeholders involved in the vaccination campaign, including general practitioners, healthcare professionals, and political authorities.

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Concepts Keywords
Increase Covid-19 pandemic
Italian Covid-19 vaccine
Political Grounded theory methodology
Socioeconomic Prevention
Vaccination Vaccine acceptability

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Covid-19
disease VO vaccination
disease VO vaccine
disease VO vaccination coverage
disease VO immunization
disease VO Gap
disease VO effective
disease VO COVID-19 vaccine

Original Article

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