Vaccine Hesitancy in India: Facilitators and Inhibitors

Author:

Parveen Heena1ORCID,Nasir Shagufta2,Shahnawaz Md Ghazi3ORCID,Husain Fatema4,Baig Juweria5ORCID,Shankar Anand6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India

2. Amity Institute of Clinical Psychology, Amity University, Rajasthan Jaipur, India

3. Department of Psychology, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi, India

4. Faculty of Education, Monash University, Australia

5. School of Philosophy, Psychology, and Linguistic Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

6. Department of Psychology, Tilka Manjhi University, Bhagalpur, India

Abstract

COVID-19 is yet not completely over; however, many people are hesitant to take COVID-19 vaccines despite their availability. Vaccine hesitancy is a major roadblock to attaining normalcy and controlling the spread of the COVID-19 virus. The present research used a multitheoretical framework (Health Belief Model, 3Cs framework, fatalism, and religious fatalism) to comprehend the complexity of vaccine hesitancy. Thus, the present study aimed at exploring vaccine hesitancy in India by using key components of the Health Belief Model, 3Cs framework, fatalism, religious fatalism, and some demographics as predictors. Data were collected electronically with the help of Google Forms from 639 Indian adults following snowballing and convenience sampling techniques with standardized measures (albeit some modifications to suit the context of the study). Descriptive analysis and hierarchical regression analysis were run in SPSS (V-22) to analyze the data. Results revealed that participants of the present study scored relatively high on vaccine hesitancy. Muslims as compared with Hindus and vaccination status emerged as significant predictors of vaccine hesitancy out of the demographic factors. Fear of COVID-19, vaccine convenience, and religious fatalism also significantly predicted vaccine hesitancy. Thus, a comprehensive approach is needed to strategically use these predictors to control vaccine hesitancy.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)

Reference99 articles.

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5. Vaccine hesitancy

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