Browsing by Author "Alkhatib, Sarah A."
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Item Demographic and Psychosocial Correlates of COVID-19 Vaccination Status among a Statewide Sample in Texas(MDPI, 2023-04-28) Luningham, Justin M.; Akpan, Idara N.; Taskin, Tanjila; Alkhatib, Sarah A.; Vishwanatha, Jamboor K.; Thompson, Erika L.The COVID-19 pandemic has been a global public health concern since early 2020 and has required local and state-level responses in the United States. There were several Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved vaccines available for the prevention of COVID-19 as of August 2022, yet not all states have achieved high vaccination coverage. Texas is a particularly unique state with a history of opposing vaccination mandates, as well as a large and ethnically/racially diverse population. This study explored the demographic and psychosocial correlates of COVID-19 vaccinations among a statewide sample in Texas. A quota sample of 1089 individuals was surveyed online from June-July 2022. The primary outcome in this study was COVID-19 vaccination status (fully vaccinated, partially vaccinated, or unvaccinated) and included independent variables related to demographics, COVID-19 infection/vaccine attitudes and beliefs, and challenges related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Hispanic/Latinx individuals were more likely than non-Hispanic White individuals to be partially vaccinated as opposed to unvaccinated. Higher education levels and confidence that the FDA would ensure a safe COVID-19 vaccine were strongly associated with a higher likelihood of being fully vaccinated. In addition, some challenges brought on by the pandemic and concerns about becoming infected or infecting others were associated with a higher likelihood of being partially or fully vaccinated. These findings emphasize the need to further investigate the interaction between individual and contextual factors in improving COVID-19 vaccination rates, especially among vulnerable and disadvantaged populations.Item The Effect of Trusted News Sources on the Confidence in the Safety of COVID-19 Vaccination(2023) Alkhatib, Sarah A.; Luningham, Justin M.; Akpan, Idara N.; Taskin, Tanjila; Vishwanatha, Jamboor K.; Thompson, Erika L.Purpose: COVID-19 vaccination prevents severe disease manifestations; yet uptake has been suboptimal. Confidence in the safety and efficacy of the vaccine influences COVID-19 vaccination decisions. Exposure to information from a trusted news source can impact perceptions and may contribute to vaccine decisions. This study assessed the association between trusted news sources and confidence in the safety of COVID-19 vaccination among Texas adults. Methods: Participants were recruited through an online panel using quota sampling based on the racial and ethnic distribution of Texas in July 2022 (n=1089). The primary predictor variable was self-reported trusted news sources for COVID-19 related news (16 options), in which respondents were asked to endorse any news source they trusted, with options ranging from print media to cable news to local news. The outcome was confidence in the safety of the COVID-19 vaccine (not at all confident to very confident). Multinomial regression analyses were conducted to model confidence in COVID-19 vaccination and trusted news sources while controlling for education, age, gender, and self-reported race. Results: Through an initial descriptive analysis, Fox News, local cable TV programs, and news broadcasting from one’s home abroad were associated with lower confidence levels. After grouping those three sources as "top news sources” and assessing their effect on confidence through a multinomial model, it was found that individuals who trusted those top sources were significantly less likely to endorse "somewhat confident” (OR=0.59, 95%CI 0.4-0.89) or "very confident” (OR=0.41, 95%CI 0.27- 0.62) compared to being "not at all confident” in the safety of the COVID-19 vaccine. Conclusions: Study findings show that some trusted news sources contributed to participants having less confidence or no confidence in the safety of the COVID-19 vaccine. Public health initiatives should consider how to address vaccine confidence among the public given the diversity of information sources people rely on.