Distrust, trauma, doubt, and protective reactions to coronavirus disease 2019: cautionary tales and lessons to learn for future pandemics: a case report.

IF 0.8 Q3 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Journal of Medical Case Reports Pub Date : 2025-03-21 DOI:10.1186/s13256-025-05162-w
Jacinda K Dariotis, Dana A Eldreth, Stephanie M Sloane, Iffat Noor, Rebecca Lee Smith
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Abstract

Background: Vaccine uptake has declined since the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic began. The pandemic changed people's perception about vaccination due to factors such as increasing mistrust in government, spread of misinformation, fear of side effects, unclear communication, concerns about rushed vaccine development, and opposition to mandates infringing on personal choice. Understanding different perspectives on vaccine decision-making is crucial for informing effective approaches to communicating about vaccines.

Case presentation: This study presents three cases with varying attitudes and behaviors about vaccination for coronavirus disease 2019, traditional childhood illnesses, and influenza influenced by different contexts and experiences. The cases span the continuum of vaccine hesitancy and uptake, from distrustful and resistant (Alexis, 56-year-old non-Hispanic White American female), through resentment for mandated uptake of the expedited coronavirus disease 2019 vaccine versus trust of long-standing preventive vaccines (Nia, 51-year-old non-Hispanic Black American female), to accepting and adopting (David, 38-year-old non-Hispanic White American male). These cases have similarities and differences across ten key "themes," including vaccine attitudes; decision-making motivations; prioritizing family's health; influence of past vaccination trauma on decision-making; significance of social support; the importance of information to guide decisions; (dis)trust in news, social media, and politicians; disappointment in humanity; future recommendations including respecting individual autonomy and providing the necessary information for individual decision-making; and openness to future vaccines.

Conclusion: The long-term impact of the public health response-including vaccine mandates-and aftermath of stigmatization of people with differing and less socially desirable vaccine beliefs on vaccine uptake and health and medical service engagement remains unknown. By drawing on rich, nuanced information collected from individuals at a time of intense national dialogue around vaccines, these three case studies offer unique and novel insights into how the dialogue around vaccine uptake should evolve to meet the needs of different people. These findings have implications for broadly promoting public health engagement by hearing varied experiences and tailoring approaches to reach diverse groups of individuals. Findings from these cases provide insights and recommendations for tailoring future pandemic-related responses to audiences with similar beliefs and experiences as those presented in these cases.

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对2019年冠状病毒病的不信任、创伤、怀疑和保护反应:未来大流行的警示故事和教训:一份病例报告
背景:自 2019 年冠状病毒疾病大流行以来,疫苗接种率有所下降。大流行改变了人们对疫苗接种的看法,原因包括对政府越来越不信任、错误信息的传播、对副作用的恐惧、沟通不明确、对匆忙开发疫苗的担忧以及反对侵犯个人选择权的强制规定。了解人们对疫苗决策的不同看法,对于采取有效的疫苗宣传方法至关重要:本研究介绍了三个受不同背景和经历影响,对 2019 年冠状病毒疾病、传统儿童疾病和流感疫苗接种持不同态度和行为的案例。这些案例跨越了疫苗犹豫和接种的连续过程,从不信任和抵触(亚历克西斯,56 岁,非西班牙裔美国白人女性),到对强制接种 2019 年冠状病毒病快速疫苗的不满和对长期预防性疫苗的信任(尼亚,51 岁,非西班牙裔美国黑人女性),再到接受和采用(大卫,38 岁,非西班牙裔美国白人男性)。这些案例在十个关键 "主题 "上有相似之处,也有不同之处,包括对疫苗的态度;决策动机;优先考虑家人的健康;过去的疫苗接种创伤对决策的影响;社会支持的重要性;信息对指导决策的重要性;对新闻、社交媒体和政治家的(不)信任;对人性的失望;未来建议,包括尊重个人自主权和为个人决策提供必要信息;以及对未来疫苗的开放性:公共卫生应对措施(包括疫苗接种规定)的长期影响,以及对疫苗接种率、健康和医疗服务参与度的长期影响,仍不得而知。这三个案例研究利用了在全国就疫苗问题展开激烈对话时从个人那里收集到的丰富而细致的信息,就围绕疫苗接种的对话应如何发展以满足不同人群的需求提供了独特而新颖的见解。这些发现对广泛促进公众健康参与具有重要意义,因为我们可以通过听取不同的经验和调整方法来接触不同的人群。从这些案例中得出的结论为我们提供了见解和建议,以便在未来针对与这些案例中的受众具有相似信仰和经历的人群制定与大流行病相关的应对措施。
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来源期刊
Journal of Medical Case Reports
Journal of Medical Case Reports Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
436
期刊介绍: JMCR is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that will consider any original case report that expands the field of general medical knowledge. Reports should show one of the following: 1. Unreported or unusual side effects or adverse interactions involving medications 2. Unexpected or unusual presentations of a disease 3. New associations or variations in disease processes 4. Presentations, diagnoses and/or management of new and emerging diseases 5. An unexpected association between diseases or symptoms 6. An unexpected event in the course of observing or treating a patient 7. Findings that shed new light on the possible pathogenesis of a disease or an adverse effect
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