Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in France

Vaccination programs against COVID-19 are being scaled up. We aimed to assess the effects of vaccine characteristics on vaccine hesitancy among healthcare workers in a multi-center survey conducted within French healthcare facilities from 1 December 2020 to 26 March 2021. We invited any healthcare w...

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Main Authors: Cécile Janssen, Alexis Maillard, Céline Bodelet, Anne-Laure Claudel, Jacques Gaillat, Tristan Delory, on behalf of the ACV Alpin Study Group
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Vaccines
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-393X/9/6/547
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spelling doaj-69dd297710414bcd9a5516d0afb8b1ea2021-06-01T00:50:32ZengMDPI AGVaccines2076-393X2021-05-01954754710.3390/vaccines9060547Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in FranceCécile Janssen0Alexis Maillard1Céline Bodelet2Anne-Laure Claudel3Jacques Gaillat4Tristan Delory5on behalf of the ACV Alpin Study GroupCentre Hospitalier Annecy Genevois, Infectious Diseases Unit, F-74374 Annecy, FranceCentre Hospitalier Annecy Genevois, Clinical Research Unit, F-74374 Annecy, FranceLaboratoire Inter-universitaire de Psychologie (LIP-PC2S), Université Grenoble, Alpes 1251 Avenue Centrale, 38400 Saint-Martin-d’Hères, FranceCentre Hospitalier Annecy Genevois, Clinical Research Unit, F-74374 Annecy, FranceCentre Hospitalier Annecy Genevois, Clinical Research Unit, F-74374 Annecy, FranceCentre Hospitalier Annecy Genevois, Clinical Research Unit, F-74374 Annecy, FranceVaccination programs against COVID-19 are being scaled up. We aimed to assess the effects of vaccine characteristics on vaccine hesitancy among healthcare workers in a multi-center survey conducted within French healthcare facilities from 1 December 2020 to 26 March 2021. We invited any healthcare workers naïve of COVID-19 vaccination to complete an online self-questionnaire. They reported on their socio-demographic characteristics, as well as their perception and beliefs towards vaccination. We measured their willingness to get vaccinated in eight scenarios for candidates’ vaccines presented sequentially (1 to 4-point scale). Candidates’ vaccines varied for efficacy (25%, 50%, 100%), length of immunization (1 year or lifetime), frequency (<1/100, <1/10,000), and severity (none, moderate, severe) of adverse events. We analyzed 4349 healthcare workers’ responses with interpretable questionnaires. The crude willingness to get vaccinated was 53.2% and increased over time. We clustered the trajectories of responses using an unsupervised classification algorithm (k-means) and identified four groups of healthcare workers: those willing to get vaccinated in any scenario (18%), those not willing to get vaccinated at all (22%), and those hesitating but more likely to accept (32%) or reject (28%) the vaccination depending on the scenario. In these last two subgroups, vaccine acceptance was growing with age, educational background and was higher among men with condition. Compared to an ideal vaccine candidate, a 50% reduced efficacy resulted in an average drop in acceptance by 0.8 (SD ± 0.8, −23.5%), while it was ranging from 1.4 (SD ± 1.0, −38.4%) to 2.1 (SD ± 1.0, −58.4%) in case of severe but rare adverse event. The acceptance of a mandatory immunization program was 29.6% overall and was positively correlated to the willingness to get vaccinated, ranging from 2.4% to 60.0%. Even if healthcare workers represent a heterogeneous population, most (80%) could accept the vaccination against COVID-19. Their willingness to get the vaccine increased over time and as immunization programs became available. Among hesitant professionals, the fear of adverse events was the main concern. Targeted information campaigns reassuring about adverse events may increase vaccine coverage, in a population with a strong opinion about mandatory immunization programs.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-393X/9/6/547COVID-19vaccinationhesitancyhealthcare workerscross-sectional surveyclustering
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cécile Janssen
Alexis Maillard
Céline Bodelet
Anne-Laure Claudel
Jacques Gaillat
Tristan Delory
on behalf of the ACV Alpin Study Group
spellingShingle Cécile Janssen
Alexis Maillard
Céline Bodelet
Anne-Laure Claudel
Jacques Gaillat
Tristan Delory
on behalf of the ACV Alpin Study Group
Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in France
Vaccines
COVID-19
vaccination
hesitancy
healthcare workers
cross-sectional survey
clustering
author_facet Cécile Janssen
Alexis Maillard
Céline Bodelet
Anne-Laure Claudel
Jacques Gaillat
Tristan Delory
on behalf of the ACV Alpin Study Group
author_sort Cécile Janssen
title Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in France
title_short Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in France
title_full Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in France
title_fullStr Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in France
title_full_unstemmed Hesitancy towards COVID-19 Vaccination among Healthcare Workers: A Multi-Centric Survey in France
title_sort hesitancy towards covid-19 vaccination among healthcare workers: a multi-centric survey in france
publisher MDPI AG
series Vaccines
issn 2076-393X
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Vaccination programs against COVID-19 are being scaled up. We aimed to assess the effects of vaccine characteristics on vaccine hesitancy among healthcare workers in a multi-center survey conducted within French healthcare facilities from 1 December 2020 to 26 March 2021. We invited any healthcare workers naïve of COVID-19 vaccination to complete an online self-questionnaire. They reported on their socio-demographic characteristics, as well as their perception and beliefs towards vaccination. We measured their willingness to get vaccinated in eight scenarios for candidates’ vaccines presented sequentially (1 to 4-point scale). Candidates’ vaccines varied for efficacy (25%, 50%, 100%), length of immunization (1 year or lifetime), frequency (<1/100, <1/10,000), and severity (none, moderate, severe) of adverse events. We analyzed 4349 healthcare workers’ responses with interpretable questionnaires. The crude willingness to get vaccinated was 53.2% and increased over time. We clustered the trajectories of responses using an unsupervised classification algorithm (k-means) and identified four groups of healthcare workers: those willing to get vaccinated in any scenario (18%), those not willing to get vaccinated at all (22%), and those hesitating but more likely to accept (32%) or reject (28%) the vaccination depending on the scenario. In these last two subgroups, vaccine acceptance was growing with age, educational background and was higher among men with condition. Compared to an ideal vaccine candidate, a 50% reduced efficacy resulted in an average drop in acceptance by 0.8 (SD ± 0.8, −23.5%), while it was ranging from 1.4 (SD ± 1.0, −38.4%) to 2.1 (SD ± 1.0, −58.4%) in case of severe but rare adverse event. The acceptance of a mandatory immunization program was 29.6% overall and was positively correlated to the willingness to get vaccinated, ranging from 2.4% to 60.0%. Even if healthcare workers represent a heterogeneous population, most (80%) could accept the vaccination against COVID-19. Their willingness to get the vaccine increased over time and as immunization programs became available. Among hesitant professionals, the fear of adverse events was the main concern. Targeted information campaigns reassuring about adverse events may increase vaccine coverage, in a population with a strong opinion about mandatory immunization programs.
topic COVID-19
vaccination
hesitancy
healthcare workers
cross-sectional survey
clustering
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-393X/9/6/547
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