@article{a96b7dada8b2464bbe2a55f5b4082d6e,
title = "COVID-19 vaccine attitudes and facilitators among people in Australia who inject drugs",
abstract = "Introduction: We aimed to describe COVID-19 vaccination attitudes and identify potential facilitators for vaccine uptake among people who inject drugs. Methods: People who inject drugs were recruited from all eight Australian capital cities (N = 884; 65\% male, mean age 44 years) and interviewed face-to-face or via telephone in June–July 2021. COVID-19 and broader vaccination attitudes were used to model latent classes. Correlates of class membership were assessed through multinomial logistic regression. Probability of endorsing potential vaccination facilitators were reported by class. Results: Three classes of participants were identified: {\textquoteleft}vaccine acceptant' (39\%), {\textquoteleft}vaccine hesitant' (34\%) and {\textquoteleft}vaccine resistant' (27\%). Those in the hesitant and resistant groups were younger, more likely to be unstably housed and less likely to have received the current season influenza vaccine than the acceptant group. In addition, hesitant participants were less likely to report a chronic medical condition than acceptant participants. Compared to vaccine acceptant and hesitant participants, vaccine-resistant participants were more likely to predominantly inject methamphetamine and to inject drugs more frequently in the past month. Both vaccine-hesitant and resistant participants endorsed financial incentives for vaccination and hesitant participants also endorsed facilitators related to vaccine trust. Discussion and Conclusion: People who inject drugs who are unstably housed or predominantly inject methamphetamine are subgroups that require targeted interventions to increase COVID-19 vaccination uptake. Vaccine-hesitant people may benefit from interventions that build trust in vaccine safety and utility. Financial incentives may improve vaccine uptake among both hesitant and resistant people.",
keywords = "COVID-19, COVID-19 vaccines, latent class analysis, people who inject drugs, vaccine hesitancy",
author = "Olivia Price and Lisa Maher and Dietze, \{Paul M.\} and Raimondo Bruno and Sione Crawford and Rachel Sutherland and Caroline Salom and Dore, \{Gregory J.\} and Amy Peacock",
note = "Funding Information: The authors thank all participants who generously shared their time and expertise. The authors thank Wing See Yuen for helpful statistical advice, Mallory Trent for input into survey items, and Prof. Simon Lenton and Prof. Louisa Degenhardt for their comment on the final manuscript. The authors also thank the Drug Trends Chief Investigators and broader Drug Trends team, past and present. The Drug Trends program (including the Illicit Drug Reporting System), the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre and the National Drug Research Institute are funded by the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care. Olivia Price is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council postgraduate scholarship and a National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre higher degree research top-up scholarship. Lisa Maher, Paul Dietze, Gregory J. Dore and Amy Peacock are supported by National Health and Medical Research Council fellowships (\#1154839, \#1136908, \#2008276, and \#1174630). Open access publishing facilitated by University of New South Wales, as part of the Wiley - University of New South Wales agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians. Funding Information: The authors thank all participants who generously shared their time and expertise. The authors thank Wing See Yuen for helpful statistical advice, Mallory Trent for input into survey items, and Prof. Simon Lenton and Prof. Louisa Degenhardt for their comment on the final manuscript. The authors also thank the Drug Trends Chief Investigators and broader Drug Trends team, past and present. The Drug Trends program (including the Illicit Drug Reporting System), the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre and the National Drug Research Institute are funded by the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care. Olivia Price is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council postgraduate scholarship and a National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre higher degree research top‐up scholarship. Lisa Maher, Paul Dietze, Gregory J. Dore and Amy Peacock are supported by National Health and Medical Research Council fellowships (\#1154839, \#1136908, \#2008276, and \#1174630). Open access publishing facilitated by University of New South Wales, as part of the Wiley ‐ University of New South Wales agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors. Drug and Alcohol Review published by John Wiley \& Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian Professional Society on Alcohol and other Drugs.",
year = "2023",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1111/dar.13621",
language = "English",
volume = "42",
pages = "1066--1077",
journal = "Drug and Alcohol Review",
issn = "0959-5236",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",
}