自我报告的慢性呼吸或自身免疫性疾病患者的COVID-19风险认知和疫苗接受度

Brianna A Smith, Emily E Ricotta, Jennifer L Kwan, Nicholas G Evans
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:COVID-19对已有疾病患者的影响尤为严重,但很少有研究确定慢性病患者对大流行本身的看法是否不同,以及慢性病之间是否存在差异。我们推测,虽然患有呼吸系统疾病或自身免疫性疾病的个体会感受到来自COVID-19的更大威胁,并且更支持非药物干预措施(npi),但患有自身免疫性疾病的个体不太可能支持基于疫苗的干预措施。方法:我们于2021年2月和11月进行了两波在线调查,询问受访者对COVID-19风险的认知、干预措施的采用和支持、接种疫苗的意愿以及接种疫苗的原因。进行了回归分析,以评估报告慢性病的受访者与经人口和政治因素调整后的健康受访者相比,与COVID-19行为和态度的关系。结果:在最初的调查中,报告患有慢性疾病的个体对COVID-19的风险感更强,而且比健康对照组更喜欢npi。与样本中的健康对照组相比,唯一的NPI仍然明显更多的是限制外出旅行。在报告患有慢性疾病的个体中,对社区一级npi的支持度高于健康对照组,并且在样本2中患有呼吸道疾病的个体中仍然很高。疫苗接受度产生了更多不同的结果:报告慢性呼吸道疾病的人比健康对照者更愿意接种疫苗6%,而我们发现患有自身免疫性疾病的个体和健康对照者之间没有显著差异。患有慢性呼吸道疾病和自身免疫性疾病的受访者更有可能希望接种疫苗以保护自己免受COVID-19的侵害,而患有自身免疫性疾病的受访者更有可能报告担心疫苗不良反应是疫苗犹豫的原因。在样本中,患有呼吸系统疾病和自身免疫性疾病的人都没有报告说他们比健康对照组更愿意接受加强疫苗。结论:仅仅认识到健康在决定态度方面的重要性是不够的:还必须认识到不同条件之间的细微差别。
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COVID-19 risk perception and vaccine acceptance in individuals with self-reported chronic respiratory or autoimmune conditions.

Background: COVID-19 disproportionately affects those with preexisting conditions, but little research has determined whether those with chronic diseases view the pandemic itself differently - and whether there are differences between chronic diseases. We theorized that while individuals with respiratory disease or autoimmune disorders would perceive greater threat from COVID-19 and be more supportive of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs), those with autoimmune disorders would be less likely to support vaccination-based interventions.

Methods: We conducted a two-wave online survey conducted in February and November 2021 asking respondents their beliefs about COVID-19 risk perception, adoption and support of interventions, willingness to be vaccinated against COVID-19, and reasons for vaccination. Regression analysis was conducted to assess the relationship of respondents reporting a chronic disease and COVID-19 behaviors and attitudes, compared to healthy respondents adjusting for demographic and political factors.

Results: In the initial survey, individuals reporting a chronic disease had both stronger feelings of risk from COVID-19 as well as preferences for NPIs than healthy controls. The only NPI that was still practiced significantly more compared to healthy controls in the resample was limiting trips outside of the home. Support for community-level NPIs was higher among individuals reporting a chronic disease than healthy controls and remained high among those with respiratory diseases in sample 2. Vaccine acceptance produced more divergent results: those reporting chronic respiratory diseases were 6% more willing to be vaccinated than healthy controls, while we found no significant difference between individuals with autoimmune diseases and healthy controls. Respondents with chronic respiratory disease and those with autoimmune diseases were more likely to want to be vaccinated to protect themselves from COVID-19, and those with an autoimmune disease were more likely to report fear of a bad vaccine reaction as the reason for vaccine hesitancy. In the resample, neither those with respiratory diseases nor autoimmune diseases reported being more willing to receive a booster vaccine than healthy controls.

Conclusions: It is not enough to recognize the importance of health in determining attitudes: nuanced differences between conditions must also be recognized.

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