Religious and Racial/Ethnic Differences in Flu and COVID-19 Vaccination Intentions

Q2 Social Sciences Sociological Focus Pub Date : 2023-07-26 DOI:10.1080/00380237.2023.2239739
R. K. Brown, Karael Campbell, Berkeley Franz, Ronald E. Brown
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Vaccination is an effective public health initiative to reduce severe illness and death due to COVID-19. Vaccine uptake in the United States has been uneven, however. One proposed mechanism to improve vaccine uptake is to engage religious groups to provide health information and encourage vaccination. It remains unclear though if Americans with differing racial/ethnic identities and religious affiliations are equally likely to receive health-related information in religious settings and endorse COVID-19 vaccination. We assessed data from the 2020–2021 National Politics Study, which utilized a national research panel of U.S. adults. Using logistic regression and a treatment effects approach, we found that having heard health-related messages in religious settings and endorsing progressive religious ideology were associated with increased COVID-19 and flu vaccine acceptance. This relationship was stronger among White American worship-goers. These findings suggest that partnerships with religious organizations may be important if additional barriers to vaccination are also addressed.
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流感和新冠肺炎疫苗接种意向中的宗教和种族/民族差异
疫苗接种是一项有效的公共卫生举措,可减少COVID-19导致的严重疾病和死亡。然而,美国的疫苗接种并不均衡。一种改善疫苗吸收的提议机制是让宗教团体提供卫生信息并鼓励接种疫苗。然而,目前尚不清楚,具有不同种族/民族身份和宗教信仰的美国人是否同样有可能在宗教环境中获得与健康相关的信息,并支持COVID-19疫苗接种。我们评估了2020-2021年国家政治研究的数据,该研究利用了一个由美国成年人组成的国家研究小组。使用逻辑回归和治疗效果方法,我们发现在宗教环境中听到与健康相关的信息和支持进步的宗教意识形态与COVID-19和流感疫苗接受度增加有关。这种关系在美国白人信徒中更为明显。这些发现表明,如果疫苗接种的其他障碍也得到解决,与宗教组织的伙伴关系可能很重要。
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来源期刊
Sociological Focus
Sociological Focus Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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