Future pandemic preparedness: conceptualizing vaccine willingness in drug-using populations during COVID-19 in Southeastern U.S. cities.

The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated health challenges among people who use opioids (PWUO) and substance using men who have sex with men (SU-MSM) in Southeastern United States cities. Within the larger NIDA Clinical Trials Network Protocol 0082 PrEP attitudes and opioid use services implementation survey, N=171 PWUO and N=169 SU-MSM answered a COVID-19 vaccine attitudes survey, including measures of vaccine willingness and health beliefs. In mixed-effects linear models for PWUO and SU-MSM, respectively: (1) belief in vaccine protection from illness was positively correlated with vaccine willingness; and (2) sense of being “a guinea pig” was negatively correlated with vaccine willingness. Having previously used a COVID-19 antigen test was positively correlated with vaccine willingness in SU-MSM. This study aims to define vaccine willingness during the COVID-19 pandemic among people who use drugs and proposes the use of the Health Belief Model to conceptualize the correlation between health beliefs and intended behaviors.

Related protocols: CTN-0082

 

Categories: COVID-19, CTN platform/ancillary study, HIV/AIDS, LGBTQ+ populations, Opioid use disorder, Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP)
Tags: Article (Peer-Reviewed)
Authors: Orozco, Kai; Laschober, Tanja C.; Tross, Susan; Ertl, Melissa M.; Paschen-Wolff, Margaret M.; Nelson, C. Mindy; Lancaster, Chloe; Hatch, Mary A.
Source: Journal of HIV/AIDS & Social Services 2025 (in press). [doi: 15381501.2025.2591675]