Self-Reported COVID-19 Vaccine and Booster Acceptance and Hesitancy Among Autistic Adults in Pennsylvania: Cross-Sectional Analysis of Survey Data
Lindsay Shea, Dylan Cooper, Jonas Ventimiglia, Shelby Frisbie, Conner Carlton, Wei Song, Mark Salzer, Brian Lee, Emily Hotez, David J Vanness

TL;DR
This study explores how autistic adults in Pennsylvania responded to the COVID-19 vaccine and booster, finding that most accepted them, with acceptance linked to factors like prior infection and trust in information.
Contribution
The study is one of the first to examine booster acceptance and hesitancy among autistic adults, identifying unique demographic and community-level factors influencing vaccination decisions.
Findings
Most autistic adults (72.6%) intended to receive or received the vaccine and booster.
Vaccine hesitancy was linked to safety concerns and misinformation, while acceptance was driven by protecting others and trust in information.
County-level factors like population density and political leanings were associated with vaccination acceptance.
Abstract
The autistic population is rapidly increasing; meanwhile, autistic adults face disproportionate risks for adverse COVID-19 outcomes. Limited research indicates that autistic individuals have been accepting of initial vaccination, but research has yet to document this population’s perceptions and acceptance of COVID-19 boosters. This study aims to identify person-level and community characteristics associated with COVID-19 vaccination and booster acceptance among autistic adults, along with self-reported reasons for their stated preferences. Understanding this information is crucial in supporting this vulnerable population given evolving booster guidelines and the ending of the public health emergency for the COVID-19 pandemic. Data are from a survey conducted in Pennsylvania from April 11 to September 12, 2022. Demographic characteristics, COVID-19 experiences, and COVID-19 vaccine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · Autism Spectrum Disorder Research
