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Vaccinated Yet Booster-Hesitant: Perspectives from Boosted, Non-Boosted, and Unvaccinated Individuals.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Lin, C; Bier, B; Tu, R; Paat, JJ; Tu, P
Published in: Vaccines (Basel)
February 25, 2023

Though available for all age groups in the US, only about half of those vaccinated have obtained a COVID-19 booster. Similar to the unvaccinated, those vaccinated-but-not-boosted may reduce the effectiveness of widespread viral protection. Booster hesitancy differs from general vaccine hesitancy yet remains less researched. We examined booster perceptions across vaccination status using qualitative methodologies. Four focus groups and 11 individual interviews (total n = 32) revealed nuanced changes and differences compared to the first-dose decision. Booster hesitancy stemmed from questions and surprises. Most vaccinated participants accepted the booster, though to varying degrees: enthusiastically with feelings of appreciation and added confidence, passively as an intuitive next step, indifferently following recommendation-"primed" by the yearly flu shot, and reluctantly with worries. The vaccinated-but-not-boosted group expressed confusion about the need for a new shot and discontentment as to why it was not communicated from the start, which coincided with their uncertainty about ending the pandemic. Inadvertently, booster recommendations further polarized non-vaccinated participants, augmenting their skepticism of the original dosages' efficacy or necessity and intensifying their distrust of the government. The findings illuminate the need for adjusting vaccination promotions to better tailor communications (e.g., distinguishing its benefits from the first vaccine and emphasizing the continued risk of COVID-19 spread). Future researchers should further explore the vaccine-accepting-yet-booster-hesitant groups' motivations and risk perceptions to reduce booster rejection.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Vaccines (Basel)

DOI

ISSN

2076-393X

Publication Date

February 25, 2023

Volume

11

Issue

3

Location

Switzerland

Related Subject Headings

  • 3207 Medical microbiology
  • 3204 Immunology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Lin, C., Bier, B., Tu, R., Paat, J. J., & Tu, P. (2023). Vaccinated Yet Booster-Hesitant: Perspectives from Boosted, Non-Boosted, and Unvaccinated Individuals. Vaccines (Basel), 11(3). https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11030550
Lin, Cheryl, Brooke Bier, Rungting Tu, John J. Paat, and Pikuei Tu. “Vaccinated Yet Booster-Hesitant: Perspectives from Boosted, Non-Boosted, and Unvaccinated Individuals.Vaccines (Basel) 11, no. 3 (February 25, 2023). https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11030550.
Lin C, Bier B, Tu R, Paat JJ, Tu P. Vaccinated Yet Booster-Hesitant: Perspectives from Boosted, Non-Boosted, and Unvaccinated Individuals. Vaccines (Basel). 2023 Feb 25;11(3).
Lin, Cheryl, et al. “Vaccinated Yet Booster-Hesitant: Perspectives from Boosted, Non-Boosted, and Unvaccinated Individuals.Vaccines (Basel), vol. 11, no. 3, Feb. 2023. Pubmed, doi:10.3390/vaccines11030550.
Lin C, Bier B, Tu R, Paat JJ, Tu P. Vaccinated Yet Booster-Hesitant: Perspectives from Boosted, Non-Boosted, and Unvaccinated Individuals. Vaccines (Basel). 2023 Feb 25;11(3).

Published In

Vaccines (Basel)

DOI

ISSN

2076-393X

Publication Date

February 25, 2023

Volume

11

Issue

3

Location

Switzerland

Related Subject Headings

  • 3207 Medical microbiology
  • 3204 Immunology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences