Socio-demographic differences in citizen' preferences for distributing a scarce, lifesaving resource: A case study using COVID-19 vaccine distribution in Belgium

IF 4.5 3区 医学 Q2 IMMUNOLOGY Vaccine Pub Date : 2025-03-19 DOI:10.1016/j.vaccine.2025.126997
Nele Raskin , Mickaël Hiligsmann , Jeroen Luyten , Sandy Tubeuf , Alexander Grigoriev , Roselinde Kessels
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic, particularly the period when safe and protective vaccines became available, presented an excellent opportunity to investigate public preferences regarding how to ration a scarce, life-saving resource. It is important to understand which distributive strategies are preferred but, as this is an inherently normative matter, also to which extent different socio-demographic groups hold different opinions. This study assesses the impact of socio-demographic characteristics on preferences for vaccine prioritization during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic at the moment when vaccines were not available yet. A representative sample of 2060 Belgians were asked to rank eight prioritization strategies. Based on the rankings, we clustered the eight strategies into five overarching groups. Then, we estimated the potential impact of respondents' socio-demographic characteristics on their preferences towards these five strategies. The ranking exercise shows that the vulnerability strategy (i.e. chronically ill and elderly) is preferred most often (N = 1815) and the market strategy (i.e. individuals who come first or pay the most) by the fewest respondents (N = 116). Preferences for vaccine distribution vary among population subgroups. Women, older or retired individuals, residents of Flanders, those with a positive attitude towards vaccination efforts and/or high vaccination willingness, and those who prefer the government or scientists to decide upon prioritization were more likely to prefer a designated priority strategy (i.e. vulnerability strategy, workers strategy or spreaders). Furthermore, younger respondents, residents of Wallonia, and those previously infected by COVID-19 tended to favour a risk-independent prioritization strategy (i.e. lottery or market strategy) more than others. This study validates the appropriateness of the implemented rationing approaches, by supporting a phased approach in which first vulnerables were vaccinated. However, it also demonstrates that different subgroups had substantially different preferences and the population was in disagreement about what constitutes a fair rationing policy for a scarce, potentially lifesaving resource.
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来源期刊
Vaccine
Vaccine 医学-免疫学
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
5.50%
发文量
992
审稿时长
131 days
期刊介绍: Vaccine is unique in publishing the highest quality science across all disciplines relevant to the field of vaccinology - all original article submissions across basic and clinical research, vaccine manufacturing, history, public policy, behavioral science and ethics, social sciences, safety, and many other related areas are welcomed. The submission categories as given in the Guide for Authors indicate where we receive the most papers. Papers outside these major areas are also welcome and authors are encouraged to contact us with specific questions.
期刊最新文献
Socio-demographic differences in citizen' preferences for distributing a scarce, lifesaving resource: A case study using COVID-19 vaccine distribution in Belgium Anti-vaccine attitudes and COVID-19 vaccine status at the end of the U.S. public health emergency Influenza vaccine effectiveness in Iceland 2014–2022: A test-negative design Meeting report: CEPI workshop on Rift Valley fever epidemiology and modeling to inform human vaccine development, Nairobi, 4–5 June 2024 A phase I study of the safety, reactogenicity and immunogenicity of two quadrivalent seasonal influenza vaccines (Fluzone® or Flublok®) with or without one of two adjuvants (AF03 or Advax-CpG55.2) in healthy adults 18–45 years of age
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