Knowledge, beliefs, and acceptability of people toward new COVID-19 vaccines: a pilot study

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Abstract

A cross-section pilot study was done to determine the knowledge and belief toward new COVID-19 vaccines among a small sample size group of people. A new Vaccine Acceptability Questionnaire (VAQ) consists of 31 questions that were concerned about three elements: underlying factors, knowledge, and beliefs. The study included 96 people from the different regions of Saudi Arabia who had accepted to participate in this pilot study. Around 31% of the included people had low to very low acceptability toward COVID-19 vaccines; however, the other 69% had moderate to high acceptability. The new simple designed questionnaire (VAQ) could be effective in assessing knowledge, beliefs, and acceptability toward COVID-19 vaccination among a specific group of population.

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Alfaleh, A., Alkattan, A., Radwan, N., Mahmoud, N., Alageel, A., Alanezi, W., & Alabdulkareem, K. (2021). Knowledge, beliefs, and acceptability of people toward new COVID-19 vaccines: a pilot study. Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics, 17(12), 5142–5144. https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2021.2013084

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