Covid-19 vaccination hesitancy among Palestinian students
نوع المنشور
بحث أصيل
المؤلفون
النص الكامل
تحميل

Much of the existing literature on vaccine hesitancy and resistance focuses on the explicit reasons individuals justify for their opposition to a particular vaccine or to vaccination programs in general. We, therefore, were interested to assess vaccine hesitancy among university students in Palestine. A valid and reliable multi-item questionnaire was made available online through social media to recruit Palestinian students. The survey was conducted between Feb-June, 2021, included socio-demographic information, knowledge and source of information about the disease, attitudes towards COVID-19 conspiracy. The total number of respondents in this study was 840 students. About 80% of the respondents were females, 5.8% of the respondents suffered from chronic diseases, 38.9% of the respondents suffered from COVID-19 themselves or a family member. The respondents' intention to receive a COVID-19 vaccine was as follows: 65% of males, 45% of females, 53% with chronic diseases, 48% without chronic diseases, 51% of patients previously suffered from COVID-19. While the general intention to get an influenza vaccination was 315 (37.5%) of those surveyed. The general assumption that COVID-19 is a man-made disease was agreed by 390 (46%), with 66% of them intending to be vaccinated. The overall intent to receive COVID-19 vaccines was the highest among students who were relying on scientific sources for their information about the vaccine (63%). Misinformation triggered by unregulated social media can have potentially serious repercussions on individuals and the community if it takes precedence over evidence-based guidelines.

المجلة
العنوان
The University of Toronto Medical Journal (UTMJ)
الناشر
The University of Toronto
بلد الناشر
كندا
Indexing
Scopus
معامل التأثير
None
نوع المنشور
مطبوع فقط
المجلد
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السنة
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الصفحات
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