Differences in Vaccination Consultation Preferred by Primary Health Care Workers and Residents in Community Settings
Tianshuo Zhao, Xianming Cai, Sihui Zhang, Mingting Wang, Linyi Chen, Juan Wang, Yajie Yu, Liandi Tao, Xiaoxia Xu, Jing Luo, Chao Wang, Juan Du, Yaqiong Liu, Qingbin Lu, Fuqiang Cui

TL;DR
This study compares how healthcare workers and residents in China prefer to receive vaccination consultations, revealing differences that could help improve vaccine acceptance strategies.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct preferences for vaccination consultation methods among healthcare workers and residents in community settings.
Findings
Residents prefer HCW-led consultations with specialized content and telephone follow-up.
Healthcare workers favor face-to-face consultations with specialized content and telephone follow-up.
Urban and rural HCWs differ in their preference for consultation duration and leadership style.
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the preference of primary HCWs and residents on vaccination consultation in community health services to provide evidence for vaccine hesitancy intervention strategies. Methods: A discrete choice model (DCM) was constructed to evaluate the preference difference between primary HCWs and residents on vaccination consultation in community health services in China during May–July 2022. Results: A total of 282 residents and 204 HCWs were enrolled in this study. The residents preferred consulting with an HCW-led approach (β = 2.168), with specialized content (β = 0.954), and accompanied by telephone follow-up (β = 1.552). In contrast, the HCWs preferred face-to-face consultation (β = 0.540) with an HCW-led approach (β = 0.458) and specialized content (β = 0.409), accompanied by telephone follow-up (β = 0.831). College residents and residents with underlying…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · Virology and Viral Diseases
