Authors
Monica Schoch-Spana, Emily K Brunson, Rex Long, Alexandra Ruth, Sanjana J Ravi, Marc Trotochaud, Luciana Borio, Janesse Brewer, Joseph Buccina, Nancy Connell, Laura Lee Hall, Nancy Kass, Anna Kirkland, Lisa Koonin, Heidi Larson, Brooke Fisher Lu, Saad B Omer, Walter A Orenstein, Gregory A Poland, Lois Privor-Dumm, Sandra Crouse Quinn, Daniel Salmon, Alexandre White
Publication date
2021/9/24
Journal
Vaccine
Volume
39
Issue
40
Pages
6004-6012
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Given the social and economic upheavals caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, political leaders, health officials, and members of the public are eager for solutions. One of the most promising, if they can be successfully developed, is vaccines. While the technological development of such countermeasures is currently underway, a key social gap remains. Past experience in routine and crisis contexts demonstrates that uptake of vaccines is more complicated than simply making the technology available. Vaccine uptake, and especially the widespread acceptance of vaccines, is a social endeavor that requires consideration of human factors. To provide a starting place for this critical component of a future COVID-19 vaccination campaign in the United States, the 23-person Working Group on Readying Populations for COVID-19 Vaccines was formed. One outcome of this group is a synthesis of the major challenges and …
Total citations
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