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Estimating the size of “anti-vax” and vaccine hesitant populations in the US, UK, and Canada: comparative latent class modeling of vaccine attitudes

Estimating the size of “anti-vax” and vaccine hesitant populations in the US, UK, and Canada: comparative latent class modeling of vaccine attitudes
Estimating the size of “anti-vax” and vaccine hesitant populations in the US, UK, and Canada: comparative latent class modeling of vaccine attitudes
Vaccine hesitancy is a significant impediment to global efforts to vaccinate against the SARS-CoV-2 virus at levels that generate herd immunity. In this article, we show the utility of an inductive approach–latent class analysis (LCA)–that allows us to characterize the size and nature of different vaccine attitude groups; and to compare how these groups differ across countries as well as across demographic subgroups within countries. We perform this analysis using original survey data collected in the US, UK, and Canada. We also show that these classes are strongly associated with SARS-CoV-2 vaccination intent and perceptions of the efficacy and safety of the COVID-19 vaccines, suggesting that attitudes about vaccines to fight the novel coronavirus pandemic are well explained by latent vaccine attitudes that precede the pandemic. More specifically, we find four substantive classes of vaccine attitudes: strong supporters, supporters with concerns, vaccine hesitant, and “anti-vax” as well as a fifth measurement error class. The strong “anti-vax” sentiment class is small in all three countries, while the strong supporter class is the largest across all three countries. We observe different distributions of class assignments in different demographic groups–most notably education and political leaning (partisanship and ideology).
COVID, anti-vax, latent class modeling, vaccine hesitancy, vaccines
2164-5515
Gravelle, Timothy B.
8d5dd570-3950-4d41-9425-2c55ec3c50a2
Phillips, Joseph B.
44de5ef5-7ffe-438a-b591-b3968850b626
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Scotto, Thomas J.
46d397ec-85ac-4a35-9020-552f4b493a77
Gravelle, Timothy B.
8d5dd570-3950-4d41-9425-2c55ec3c50a2
Phillips, Joseph B.
44de5ef5-7ffe-438a-b591-b3968850b626
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Scotto, Thomas J.
46d397ec-85ac-4a35-9020-552f4b493a77

Gravelle, Timothy B., Phillips, Joseph B., Reifler, Jason and Scotto, Thomas J. (2022) Estimating the size of “anti-vax” and vaccine hesitant populations in the US, UK, and Canada: comparative latent class modeling of vaccine attitudes. Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics, 18 (1), [2008214]. (doi:10.1080/21645515.2021.2008214).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Vaccine hesitancy is a significant impediment to global efforts to vaccinate against the SARS-CoV-2 virus at levels that generate herd immunity. In this article, we show the utility of an inductive approach–latent class analysis (LCA)–that allows us to characterize the size and nature of different vaccine attitude groups; and to compare how these groups differ across countries as well as across demographic subgroups within countries. We perform this analysis using original survey data collected in the US, UK, and Canada. We also show that these classes are strongly associated with SARS-CoV-2 vaccination intent and perceptions of the efficacy and safety of the COVID-19 vaccines, suggesting that attitudes about vaccines to fight the novel coronavirus pandemic are well explained by latent vaccine attitudes that precede the pandemic. More specifically, we find four substantive classes of vaccine attitudes: strong supporters, supporters with concerns, vaccine hesitant, and “anti-vax” as well as a fifth measurement error class. The strong “anti-vax” sentiment class is small in all three countries, while the strong supporter class is the largest across all three countries. We observe different distributions of class assignments in different demographic groups–most notably education and political leaning (partisanship and ideology).

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Estimating the size of anti-vax and vaccine hesitant populations in the US UK and Canada comparative latent class modeling of vaccine attitudes - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 16 November 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 March 2022
Published date: 2022
Keywords: COVID, anti-vax, latent class modeling, vaccine hesitancy, vaccines

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496982
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496982
ISSN: 2164-5515
PURE UUID: 37c062a3-8689-496c-9d1d-1503c350c6eb
ORCID for Jason Reifler: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1116-7346

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Date deposited: 09 Jan 2025 17:33
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Timothy B. Gravelle
Author: Joseph B. Phillips
Author: Jason Reifler ORCID iD
Author: Thomas J. Scotto

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