Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status. / Buhl, Caroline; Jacobsen, Ramune; Almarsdóttir, Anna Birna.

2023. Poster session presented at European Drug Utilization Research Group (EuroDURG) Conference 2023 - Sustainability of drug use: equity and innovation, Bologna, Italy.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Buhl, C, Jacobsen, R & Almarsdóttir, AB 2023, 'Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status', European Drug Utilization Research Group (EuroDURG) Conference 2023 - Sustainability of drug use: equity and innovation, Bologna, Italy, 27/06/2023 - 30/06/2023.

APA

Buhl, C., Jacobsen, R., & Almarsdóttir, A. B. (2023). Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status. Poster session presented at European Drug Utilization Research Group (EuroDURG) Conference 2023 - Sustainability of drug use: equity and innovation, Bologna, Italy.

Vancouver

Buhl C, Jacobsen R, Almarsdóttir AB. Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status. 2023. Poster session presented at European Drug Utilization Research Group (EuroDURG) Conference 2023 - Sustainability of drug use: equity and innovation, Bologna, Italy.

Author

Buhl, Caroline ; Jacobsen, Ramune ; Almarsdóttir, Anna Birna. / Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status. Poster session presented at European Drug Utilization Research Group (EuroDURG) Conference 2023 - Sustainability of drug use: equity and innovation, Bologna, Italy.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{038f2e49b9104b39a022044f49501b8a,
title = "Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status",
abstract = "Background: Medication beliefs can predict medication adherence. Vaccines may not be perceived as medications, and therefore medication beliefs may not predict vaccination status. The aim was to investigate the association between beliefs about medications, as opposed to attitudes towards vaccines (vaccine hesitancy), and COVID-19 vaccination status in the general public.Methods: An online questionnaire survey using social media was conducted in Denmark. The validated Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ) was used to measure beliefs about medications. The newly validated Danish translation of the Vaccination Attitudes Examination scale (VAX) was applied to measure vaccine hesitancy. Independent t-test compared medication beliefs and vaccination hesitancy between COVID-19 vaccinated and not vaccinated respondents. Results: Among in total 211 respondents, 83% were female; mean (SD) age was 49.9 (18.0) years; 83%, 6% and 11%, respectively, were fully, partly and not COVID-19 vaccinated. Fully vaccinated compared to not vaccinated respondents had more positive beliefs about medications and lower hesitancy towards vaccines: respective mean (SD) BMQ scores (scale range 1-5) were 3.7 (0.60) and 2.3 (0.59), p<0.001, while respective mean (SD) VAX scores (scale range 1-6) were 2.4 (0.834) and 4.9 (0.932), p<0.001. The mean total BMQ and VAX scores were negatively correlated (r=-0.716, p<0.01). Conclusion: Even though beliefs about medications and attitudes towards vaccines were correlated, attitudes towards vaccines seem to be more strongly associated with COVID-19 vaccination status than were beliefs about medicines. The findings should be further confirmed in regression analysis.",
author = "Caroline Buhl and Ramune Jacobsen and Almarsd{\'o}ttir, {Anna Birna}",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 27-06-2023 Through 30-06-2023",
url = "https://eventi.unibo.it/eurodurg2023",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Association between beliefs about medications, attitudes towards vaccines and COVID-19 vaccination status

AU - Buhl, Caroline

AU - Jacobsen, Ramune

AU - Almarsdóttir, Anna Birna

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Background: Medication beliefs can predict medication adherence. Vaccines may not be perceived as medications, and therefore medication beliefs may not predict vaccination status. The aim was to investigate the association between beliefs about medications, as opposed to attitudes towards vaccines (vaccine hesitancy), and COVID-19 vaccination status in the general public.Methods: An online questionnaire survey using social media was conducted in Denmark. The validated Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ) was used to measure beliefs about medications. The newly validated Danish translation of the Vaccination Attitudes Examination scale (VAX) was applied to measure vaccine hesitancy. Independent t-test compared medication beliefs and vaccination hesitancy between COVID-19 vaccinated and not vaccinated respondents. Results: Among in total 211 respondents, 83% were female; mean (SD) age was 49.9 (18.0) years; 83%, 6% and 11%, respectively, were fully, partly and not COVID-19 vaccinated. Fully vaccinated compared to not vaccinated respondents had more positive beliefs about medications and lower hesitancy towards vaccines: respective mean (SD) BMQ scores (scale range 1-5) were 3.7 (0.60) and 2.3 (0.59), p<0.001, while respective mean (SD) VAX scores (scale range 1-6) were 2.4 (0.834) and 4.9 (0.932), p<0.001. The mean total BMQ and VAX scores were negatively correlated (r=-0.716, p<0.01). Conclusion: Even though beliefs about medications and attitudes towards vaccines were correlated, attitudes towards vaccines seem to be more strongly associated with COVID-19 vaccination status than were beliefs about medicines. The findings should be further confirmed in regression analysis.

AB - Background: Medication beliefs can predict medication adherence. Vaccines may not be perceived as medications, and therefore medication beliefs may not predict vaccination status. The aim was to investigate the association between beliefs about medications, as opposed to attitudes towards vaccines (vaccine hesitancy), and COVID-19 vaccination status in the general public.Methods: An online questionnaire survey using social media was conducted in Denmark. The validated Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ) was used to measure beliefs about medications. The newly validated Danish translation of the Vaccination Attitudes Examination scale (VAX) was applied to measure vaccine hesitancy. Independent t-test compared medication beliefs and vaccination hesitancy between COVID-19 vaccinated and not vaccinated respondents. Results: Among in total 211 respondents, 83% were female; mean (SD) age was 49.9 (18.0) years; 83%, 6% and 11%, respectively, were fully, partly and not COVID-19 vaccinated. Fully vaccinated compared to not vaccinated respondents had more positive beliefs about medications and lower hesitancy towards vaccines: respective mean (SD) BMQ scores (scale range 1-5) were 3.7 (0.60) and 2.3 (0.59), p<0.001, while respective mean (SD) VAX scores (scale range 1-6) were 2.4 (0.834) and 4.9 (0.932), p<0.001. The mean total BMQ and VAX scores were negatively correlated (r=-0.716, p<0.01). Conclusion: Even though beliefs about medications and attitudes towards vaccines were correlated, attitudes towards vaccines seem to be more strongly associated with COVID-19 vaccination status than were beliefs about medicines. The findings should be further confirmed in regression analysis.

M3 - Poster

Y2 - 27 June 2023 through 30 June 2023

ER -

ID: 358434383