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Parental Preferences and Reasons for COVID-19 Vaccination Among Their Children

Neil Sehgal; Benjamin Rader; Autumn Gertz; Christina M. Astley; John S Brownstein.
Preprint en Inglés | PREPRINT-MEDRXIV | ID: ppmedrxiv-22281313
BackgroundCOVID-19 vaccination rates among children have stalled, while new coronavirus strains continue to emerge. To improve child vaccination rates, policymakers must better understand parental preferences and reasons for COVID-19 vaccination among their children. Methods and FindingsCross-sectional surveys were administered online to 30,174 US parents with at least one child of COVID-19 vaccine eligible age (5-17 years) between January 1 and May 9, 2022. Participants self-reported willingness to vaccinate their child and reasons for hesitancy, and answered additional questions about demographics, pandemic related behavior, and vaccination status. Willingness to vaccinate a child for COVID-19 was strongly associated with parental vaccination status (multivariate odds ratio 97.9, 95% confidence interval 86.9-111.0). The majority of fully vaccinated (86%) and unvaccinated (84%) parents reported concordant vaccination preferences for their eligible child. Age and education had differing relationships by vaccination status, with higher age and education positively associated with willingness among vaccinated parents. Among all parents hesitant to vaccinate their children, the two most frequently reported reasons were possible side effects (47%) and that vaccines are too new (44%). Among hesitant parents, parental vaccination status was inversely associated with reported lack of trust in government (p<.001) and scientists (p<.001). Cluster analysis identified three groups of hesitant parents based on their reasons for hesitance to vaccinate, with distinct concerns that may be obscured when analyzed in aggregate. ConclusionFactors associated with willingness to vaccinate children and reasons for hesitancy may inform targeted approaches to increase vaccination.