Abstract

In the response to the coronavirus pandemic, much attention has been invested in promoting COVID-19 vaccination. However, the impact of seasonal influenza should not be neglected, particularly during the winter influenza surge. Currently, most influenza vaccination campaigns target at healthcare workers or high-risk population groups, while COVID-19 vaccination programmes are targeting the whole population as a single homogeneous group. There is limited research on the promotion of influenza vaccination for university students who study, live, and socialise in close contact with a large variety of people on campus, resulting in a low vaccination rate among this underserved group. Thus, a vaccination programme tailored for university students should be developed to increase protection against influenza-like illnesses and complications, and to help achieve herd immunity across populations who spread viruses. WHO has advocated the potential value of social marketing in vaccination campaigns and highlighted the need for audience segmentation as a major prerequisite component of intervention design. This study aims to identify distinct and homogeneous groups of university students based on sociodemographic, psychographic, and behavioural attributes to inform interventions. Two-step cluster analysis was applied in a sample size of 530 university students and revealed four segments that demonstrate statistically significant differences in their attitudes, behaviours, intentions, and responses to promotion messages about seasonal influenza and COVID-19 vaccination. The findings provide a detailed understanding of segment characteristics among university students that can be applied to develop an effective social marketing campaign that can motivate influenza vaccination and cross-promote uptake of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Highlights

  • Seasonal influenza, an acute illness of the respiratory tract and highly infectious disease caused by influenza viruses, is a severe health threat worldwide

  • There is only limited research that focuses on promoting seasonal influenza vaccination among healthy young adults such as university students

  • Audience segmentation is a basic benchmark of social marketing campaign development

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Summary

Introduction

An acute illness of the respiratory tract and highly infectious disease caused by influenza viruses, is a severe health threat worldwide. Half a million deaths and five million cases of critical illness around the globe are estimated to be a consequence of seasonal influenza [1]. While significant energy has been expended on the COVID-19 pandemic, seasonal influenza requires ongoing attention as it has been a global health issue for centuries. Seasonal influenza vaccination rates among university students are lower than other population groups [5] but spreading rates are higher [6]. Promoting vaccination against seasonal influenza among this segment of the population is essential to combat the disease

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