Impact of a hypothetical COVID-19 vaccine mandate on parental likelihood to vaccinate children: Exploring school-related concerns and vaccination decision-making.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-7-2023
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We assessed the impact of a hypothetical school-entry COVID-19 vaccine mandate on parental likelihood to vaccinate their child.
METHODS: We collected demographics, COVID-19-related school concerns, and parental likelihood to vaccinate their child from parents of patients aged 3-16 years seen across nine pediatric Emergency Departments from 06/07/2021 to 08/13/2021. Wilcoxon signed-rank test compared pre- and post-mandate vaccination likelihood. Multivariate linear and logistic regression analyses explored associations between parental concerns with baseline and change in vaccination likelihood, respectively.
RESULTS: Vaccination likelihood increased from 43% to 50% with a hypothetical vaccine mandate (Z = -6.69, p < 0.001), although most parents (63%) had no change, while 26% increased and 11% decreased their vaccination likelihood. Parent concerns about their child contracting COVID-19 was associated with greater baseline vaccination likelihood. No single school-related concern explained the increased vaccination likelihood with a mandate.
CONCLUSION: Parental school-related concerns did not drive changes in likelihood to vaccinate with a mandate.
Publication Title
Vaccine
Volume
41
Issue
50
First Page
7493
Last Page
7497
Recommended Citation
Sarafian, J., Eucker, S., Gillman, M., DeLaroche, A., Rodriguez, R., Rayburn, D., Nadeau, N., Drago, L., Cullen, D., Kugler, E., Meskill, S., Bialeck, S., & Baumann, B. (2023). Impact of a hypothetical COVID-19 vaccine mandate on parental likelihood to vaccinate children: Exploring school-related concerns and vaccination decision-making.. Vaccine, 41 (50), 7493-7497. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2023.11.022