Understanding Concerns about COVID-19 and Vaccination: Perspectives from Kidney Transplant Recipients
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting and Population
2.2. Study Design, Data Collection, and Interview Procedures
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Interviewee Characteristics
3.2. Perspectives about COVID-19 Precautions
3.3. Perspectives about COVID-19 Vaccination
3.4. Perspectives about Healthcare Team
3.5. Perspectives about Interpersonal Tensions around COVID-19 Prevention
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant Characteristics | Mean (±SD) or n (%) |
---|---|
Age (years) | |
Mean (±SD) | 57 (±12) |
Range | 31–76 |
Gender | |
Male | 19 (50) |
Female | 19 (50) |
COVID-19 Vaccine Status | |
Vaccinated | 31 (82) |
Unvaccinated | 7 (18) |
COVID-19 Infection | |
One or more instances | 12 (32) |
None | 26 (68) |
Vaccination Status | Comments from KTRs |
---|---|
Vaccinated | Especially given the medications I’m on, with immunosuppressants and all that, I pretty much mask up in public and sanitize my hands a lot. |
It’s just more awareness, you know, making sure I use a sanitizer before I play with my grandchildren. We have hand sanitizer in the car. So, every time we get back in the car, we make sure we use it. We’re still having our groceries picked up instead of going through the grocery store. I think a heightened awareness of our situation is appropriate. | |
I try to stay home. I recently started working again outside of the home and I wear my mask all the time. I don’t have the people over to my house. My husband has people over to the house and one of my requirements is they have to wear masks here. | |
Unvaccinated | Distance, you know, keeping enough distance is key. |
Having been a transplant patient and having gone through a couple years of dialysis, I already had some pretty strict personal hygiene, and that included everything that went away with COVID. I hadn’t even been to a buffet for years. | |
It was to pretty much stay isolated or away from anywhere we thought was a threat, especially myself. So, I did not venture out very much, surely not in crowds, not in a supermarket, church, things like that. So that was mine. Mine was complete withdrawal. |
Vaccination Status | Comments from KTRs |
---|---|
Vaccinated | I didn’t want to get sick and risk losing my transplant or anything worse than that. |
My feeling was that I have a lot to risk if I get COVID. I’m already immunosuppressed. …So, I decided that I would take the chance and so that maybe I wouldn’t have to take a chance for COVID. I would take a chance to get the COVID vaccine. | |
I did have concerns about side effects, that it was not, it was my understanding, it wasn’t fully tested on transplant patients. But to me, I felt the alternative of getting COVID was worse. | |
Unvaccinated | With all the health issues I have, it terrifies me. …I looked at ingredient lists and side effects and just a whole different slew of stuff. And I’m just too afraid of what it could do to me. |
My mom, she’s immunocompromised as well, she has multiple sclerosis. So, she was really worried about getting it [vaccine] and because of how it would react with her body. And I was the same way. …They’re talking about how people die and all this. Instantly people just instantly die on the news, which I don’t know if it’s true or not. But just the fact that they’re saying that, it’s just like, “Okay, is this really a hundred percent like they say so?” And those people would die, and they don’t have anything wrong them, but they still die. So, I’m like, man, I’m immunocompromised. It’s just like a higher risk. | |
I got personal and asked a lot of doctors and a lot nurses, have you had the vaccine? Yes. Have you had COVID since? Yes. So, I have not seen or have not been convinced that it stops you from getting it. |
Vaccination Status | Comments from KTRs |
---|---|
Vaccinated | The transplant team and my primary care provider, I would hope that they wouldn’t steer me wrong or give me false information. …I have faith in them because I’m still living. I had a transplant. I had to have faith in them for that. I’m still around. |
They [care team] didn’t know if it [a COVID vaccine] would work for someone taking immunosuppressants. | |
At the very beginning, it was like, “Well, we’re [the care team] not sure. They haven’t done a lot of testing with transplant patients, so we’re not sure how well you’ll respond to it, but you know, it can’t hurt”. | |
Unvaccinated | I tell [my doctor] to convince me [to get the vaccine], and he came the closest to talking to me in an intelligent way that explained things to me in a way that wasn’t just, do it because I say to do it, don’t just do it because I do it. And he explained it to me a little scientifically, and he made some sense to me. |
I trust my folks at [hospital] quite fully. My doctors and stuff at [hospital], yes. But I do follow up in my own research. | |
Just you should get the vaccine. And you know, how many got it? A lot. That was about the extent of it. My family doctor, the local one, he was really emotional about it. “Oh, I’m seeing these people dying in the hospital”. And two weeks later after he’s vaccinated and he’s boosted, he’s sick with it. |
Vaccination Status | Comments from KTRs |
---|---|
Vaccinated | So that goes back to the vaccination; the same people who are not getting vaccinated are a lot more loose with their COVID protocols. So, you know, I’ve made the decision during these cold winter months, like I’m sorry, I just can’t see them. I can’t take that risk to see them indoors. |
Everybody now has taken off their masks and have kind of resumed life as normal. …And that concerns me because the vaccinations don’t make you invulnerable to the disease or to the sickness. …I can’t just walk around like nothing’s happened, that the vaccination didn’t suddenly, you know, totally protect me from getting COVID. Now, I think some people feel that they’ve been vaccinated, that’s how they feel. And that’s fine. But they don’t have compromised immune systems is what I’m getting at. | |
It was kind of challenging because this Thanksgiving, we generally host. And so feelings were hurt because I asked my sister and brother-in-law, who aren’t vaccinated, if they would go get tested and they were offended that I just asked them. | |
Unvaccinated | I don’t think [people] realize the seriousness sometimes and the vulnerability of the transplant recipient and they’re a little careless. But my immediate family get it, and they’re very careful, cautious, and they open doors for me. |
So, it’s a strict divide. There’s the vaxers and the anti-vaxers or the non-vaxers. I’m not anti-vax. I’m non-vax. And to me, the vaxers are the ruder, crueler, meaner ones. That’s my perception. | |
People want to hug me and shake my hand and I just don’t. And in that kind of conversation, I’m the stuck up one. Don’t touch me. We’ll get really frustrated if we know somebody’s been exposed to something and they’re insensitive about that, concerning me. |
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Share and Cite
MacEwan, S.R.; Gaughan, A.A.; Dixon, G.N.; Olvera, R.G.; Tarver, W.L.; Rahurkar, S.; Rush, L.J.; Schenk, A.D.; Stevens, J.; McAlearney, A.S. Understanding Concerns about COVID-19 and Vaccination: Perspectives from Kidney Transplant Recipients. Vaccines 2023, 11, 1134. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11071134
MacEwan SR, Gaughan AA, Dixon GN, Olvera RG, Tarver WL, Rahurkar S, Rush LJ, Schenk AD, Stevens J, McAlearney AS. Understanding Concerns about COVID-19 and Vaccination: Perspectives from Kidney Transplant Recipients. Vaccines. 2023; 11(7):1134. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11071134
Chicago/Turabian StyleMacEwan, Sarah R., Alice A. Gaughan, Graham N. Dixon, Ramona G. Olvera, Willi L. Tarver, Saurabh Rahurkar, Laura J. Rush, Austin D. Schenk, Jack Stevens, and Ann Scheck McAlearney. 2023. "Understanding Concerns about COVID-19 and Vaccination: Perspectives from Kidney Transplant Recipients" Vaccines 11, no. 7: 1134. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11071134
APA StyleMacEwan, S. R., Gaughan, A. A., Dixon, G. N., Olvera, R. G., Tarver, W. L., Rahurkar, S., Rush, L. J., Schenk, A. D., Stevens, J., & McAlearney, A. S. (2023). Understanding Concerns about COVID-19 and Vaccination: Perspectives from Kidney Transplant Recipients. Vaccines, 11(7), 1134. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11071134