Abstract

Background: To achieve herd immunity, the acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccine by the population, especially healthcare professionals, plays a key role. The objective of the present paper is to address the differences in attitudes among Spanish healthcare professionals compared with the general population regarding COVID-19 vaccination.Methods: This cross-sectional study included data from 2,136 adults (n = 664 healthcare professionals) from an online survey conducted from May 6 to June 9, 2021. The Vaccination attitudes examination scale was used to measure the negative attitudes toward vaccines. Four subscales: mistrust of vaccine benefit, worries about the unforeseen future effect, concerns about commercial profiteering, and preference for natural immunity were calculated. Generalized linear mixed models were conducted to study these associations.Results: Between 10.2 and 22.6% of the subjects showed high levels of negative attitudes toward vaccines. However, only 1.5% of our sample (2.1% among healthcare professionals) refused to get the COVID-19 vaccine when it was offered because they chose otherwise. Retired people showed the lowest concerns and the highest trust in vaccines. No statistically significant effects were found between working in a healthcare field and having higher positive attitudes toward vaccines.Conclusion: Low levels of rejection against the COVID-19 vaccine were identified in the present sample. However, despite being at a higher risk, health care professionals did not show higher positive attitudes toward vaccines. Furthermore, refusal percentage to vaccination was higher among healthcare professionals compared with non-healthcare professionals. Developing a strategy to increase positive attitudes against the COVID-19 vaccine should be an objective for public health policy.

Highlights

  • In a global pandemic context, such as that generated by SARSCOV-2, immunization of the population through vaccination is a public health priority [1,2,3]

  • Around 55.2% reported having been vaccinated against COVID19 (27.6% with necessary doses, 44.8% were not vaccinated yet due to medical reasons (0.6%), pregnancy (0.8%), just had COVID-19 (0.5), or the vaccine had not been offered yet (38.6%). 1.5% of the sample affirmed that the vaccine had been offered but they had rejected the jab

  • This percentage was higher among healthcare professionals compared to non-healthcare professionals, students, or those unemployed

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Summary

Introduction

In a global pandemic context, such as that generated by SARSCOV-2, immunization of the population through vaccination is a public health priority [1,2,3]. Different studies have shown the efficacy of the vaccines currently in the market, reporting levels above 90% for Pfizer, Moderna, and Sputnik V, or above 60% in the case of Vaxzevria (AstraZeneca) or Janssen [3]. In recent months, confidence in vaccines (especially in the case of the Vaxzevria vaccine) has been dampened by doubts about their efficacy and reported side effects [4,5,6,7]. The acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccine by the population, especially healthcare professionals, plays a key role. The objective of the present paper is to address the differences in attitudes among Spanish healthcare professionals compared with the general population regarding COVID-19 vaccination. Generalized linear mixed models were conducted to study these associations

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