Abstract
ObjectivesThis study analysed the association between social and ideological determinants with COVID-19 vaccine accessibility and hesitancy in the Spanish adult population. Study designThis was a repeated cross-sectional study. MethodsThe data analysed are based on monthly surveys conducted by the Centre for Sociological Research between May 2021 and February 2022. Individuals were classified according to their COVID-19 vaccination status into (1) vaccinated (reference group); (2) willing to vaccinate but not vaccinated, proxy of lack of vaccine accessibility; and (3) hesitant, proxy of vaccine hesitancy. Independent variables included social (educational attainment, gender) and ideological determinants (voting in the last elections, importance attached to the health vs the economic impact of the pandemic, and political self-placement). We estimated odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) conducting one age-adjusted multinomial logistic regression model for each determinant and then stratified them by gender. ResultsBoth social and ideological determinants had a weak association with the lack of vaccine accessibility. Individuals with medium educational attainment had higher odds of vaccine hesitancy (OR = 1.44, CI 1.08–1.93) compared with those with high educational attainment. People self-identified as conservative (OR = 2.90; CI 2.02–4.15) and those who prioritised the economic impact (OR = 3.80; CI 2.62–5.49) and voted for parties opposed to the Government (OR = 2.00; CI 1.54–2.60) showed higher vaccine hesitancy. The stratified analysis showed a similar pattern for both men and women. ConclusionsConsidering the determinants of vaccine uptake and hesitancy could help to design strategies that increase immunisation at the population level and minimise health inequities.
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