AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in West Bengal, India, highlighting vaccine hesitancy as a significant obstacle.
  • An online survey of 803 respondents revealed that while a majority expressed willingness to get vaccinated, a notable percentage still doubted the necessity of vaccination.
  • Results indicated that misinformation and lack of awareness, rather than hesitancy, could be the biggest challenges affecting vaccination rates in the region.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Rapid vaccination is the only way to fight against COVID-19.Vaccine hesitancy is the major barrier against this strategy. The main objective of this cross-sectional study was to analyze COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in the general population of West Bengal (India), as well as to investigate the factors that were independently associated with people's desire to receive the vaccine.

Methods: An online questionnaire was distributed by email, Whatsapp, and other social media platforms, and the responses were analyzed using the SPSS (Version 20) software.

Results: We conducted a web-based survey in West Bengal, India ( = 803), and accumulated information on individuals' desire to adopt vaccine against COVID-19, views about the virus's effectiveness, and many knowledge-based socio-demographic factors that potentially impact the overall vaccination efforts. We found that, 12.08% of participants do not believe that vaccination against COVID-19 is necessary, but among the rest of the population, 44.33% of individuals are willing to be vaccinated once the vaccine is available, whereas 39.60% of the population responded that they will not be vaccinated immediately but will do so later.

Conclusions: Despite the participants' strong vaccine willingness, our findings revealed a troubling degree of lake of awareness and insignificant scientific knowledge about the COVID-19 pandemic and its associated vaccination programme. Vaccination hesitancy is not a barrier in this survey region, but poor vaccine availability and a lack of awareness campaigns may instill unfavorable beliefs in those who refuse to be vaccinated.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8808715PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vacun.2022.01.002DOI Listing

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