Kristen Lay , Marina Feffer , David Slade , Fritzie S. Albarillo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Solid organ transplant recipients (SOTRs) may have a higher risk of serious disease and death due to COVID-19. It is necessary to determine the main motivators and demotivators for SOTRs to receive COVID-19 vaccinations to improve patient education.
Methods
A voluntary and anonymous survey was created using questions adopted from the Center for Disease Control COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence: Rapid Community Assessment. Questions included demographics, vaccination status and opinions in multiple choice and free response format. The survey was distributed in July 2023 and was open for one month.
Results
A total of 127 SOTRs responded which included patients 18 years and older who received one of the following transplants: heart (12.6 %), lung(s) (37.01 %), liver (31.5 %), kidney (11.81 %), and liver and kidney (7.09 %). The overwhelming majority of respondents received a primary vaccination series (97.64 %). Among the vaccinated, 68.55 % received a bivalent booster vaccination and 32.28 % have received a second booster vaccination. The greatest motivating factors among vaccinated were “protecting my health” (84.68 %) “protecting the health of family and friends” (66.13 %), and “to protect the health of the community” (36.29 %). Only 3 SOTRs were unvaccinated, all of whom reported that they felt the vaccine was unsafe.
Conclusion
While the overwhelming majority of SOTRs were vaccinated against COVID-19 to protect their health and the health of others, a minority have hesitations about receiving booster vaccinations. Targeting patient education towards these concerns will improve the protection of the SOTR community.
期刊介绍:
To provide to national and regional audiences experiences unique to them or confirming of broader concepts originating in large controlled trials. All aspects of organ, tissue and cell transplantation clinically and experimentally. Transplantation Reports will provide in-depth representation of emerging preclinical, impactful and clinical experiences. -Original basic or clinical science articles that represent initial limited experiences as preliminary reports. -Clinical trials of therapies previously well documented in large trials but now tested in limited, special, ethnic or clinically unique patient populations. -Case studies that confirm prior reports but have occurred in patients displaying unique clinical characteristics such as ethnicities or rarely associated co-morbidities. Transplantation Reports offers these benefits: -Fast and fair peer review -Rapid, article-based publication -Unrivalled visibility and exposure for your research -Immediate, free and permanent access to your paper on Science Direct -Immediately citable using the article DOI