Author:
Xie Zhaomin,Lau Joseph Tak-Fai,Liang Yuanke,Ouyang Qiaolei,Chen Junjia,Lin Si,Yao Kaitao,Hu Xuanyin,Lin Haoyu,Yu Yanqiu,Zeng De
Abstract
IntroductionIt is essential to protect cancer patients from contracting COVID-19 through vaccination. A majority of cancer patients are recommended by international health authorities to take up the vaccines. COVID-19 vaccine refusal among cancer patients during the pandemic period is under-researched. This study investigated factors of vaccine refusal based on the Health Belief Model (HBM).MethodsA cross-sectional study was conducted among female breast cancer patients, male/female thyroid cancer patients, and gynecological cancer patients in Shantou, China from April to August 2022 (n = 1,115). Multinomial logistic regression analysis adjusted for socio-demographics was conducted to test factors of COVID-19. Adjusted odds ratios of the two models comparing vaccine refusal vs. “vaccine non-refusal” and vaccine refusal vs. ever-vaccination were derived and presented.ResultsOf all the participants, the prevalence of vaccine refusal, “vaccine non-refusal,” and ever-vaccination was 25.9, 22.2, and 51.8%, respectively. In both multinomial logistic regression models, significant factors of vaccine refusal included socio-demographics (age, education level, employment status, monthly household income, cancer type, duration since cancer diagnosis, current treatment status) and some vaccine-related HBM (perceived benefits, perceived barriers, cue to action, and self-efficacy). Perceived severity of COVID-19 was significant only in the vaccine refusal vs. ever-vaccination model. In neither model, perceived susceptibility to contract COVID-19 was statistically significant.ConclusionAbout ¼ of the participants expressed vaccine refusal. Interventions are warranted. Future longitudinal studies are needed to verify this study’s findings. Pilot interventions should also be launched to test effectiveness of interventions modifying the significant HBM factors found in this study.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health