Preferences for herpes zoster vaccination among adults aged 50 years and older in the United States: results from a discrete choice experiment

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Abstract

Background: Most adults, and disproportionately fewer African-Americans, have not received herpes zoster (HZ) vaccination despite current recommendations. This study (GSK study identifiers: 208677/HO-17-18066) assessed HZ vaccination preferences among adults aged ≥ 50 years. Research design and methods: In this discrete choice experiment, respondents chose among a ‘no vaccine’ option and two HZ vaccine profiles, characterized by seven attributes, in a series of choice questions. Random-parameters logit results were used to predict likely vaccine uptake. Subgroup and latent class analysis of African-American’s preferences were performed. Results: The preference weight for choosing HZ vaccines over no vaccine was statistically significant among the 1,454 respondents (71.9% whites; 25.2% African-Americans). Out-of-pocket (OOP) cost and vaccine effectiveness (VE) were the most important attributes. The African-American and the non-African-American subgroups had statistically significant differences in preferences (χ2 = 59.91, p < 0.001), mainly driven by OOP cost and VE. Latent class analysis identified three groups of African-American respondents with systematically different preferences; two comprised likely-vaccinators, with one being more cost sensitive at lower price thresholds, and one likely non-vaccinators. Conclusions: For all respondents, HZ vaccine choices were most sensitive to total OOP cost, followed by VE.

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Patterson, B. J., Myers, K., Stewart, A., Mange, B., Hillson, E. M., & Poulos, C. (2021). Preferences for herpes zoster vaccination among adults aged 50 years and older in the United States: results from a discrete choice experiment. Expert Review of Vaccines, 20(6), 729–741. https://doi.org/10.1080/14760584.2021.1910502

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