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. 2021 Oct 21;9(11):1222. doi: 10.3390/vaccines9111222

Table 3.

Answers regarding vaccinations and COVID-19 vaccination provided by respondents on the whole and grouped by willingness/unwillingness to be vaccinated.

Item Respondents
n (%)
Vaccinated/Willing to Be Vaccinated
n (%)
p Value
Yes No
Favorable to vaccination in general <0.001
Yes 470 (45.1) 460 (97.9) 10 (2.1)
No 571 (54.9) 505 (88.4) 66 (11.6)
Vaccinated against influenza (season 2019/20) 0.004
Yes 269 (25.8) 260 (96.7) 9 (3.3)
No 772 (74.2) 705 (91.3) 67 (8.7)
Vaccinated against influenza (season 2020/21) <0.001
Yes 768 (73.8) 726 (94.5) 42 (5.5)
No 273 (26.2) 239 (87.5) 34 (12.5)
Might the COVID-19 vaccines cause health problems? 0.015
Yes 906 (87) 833 (91.9) 73 (8.1)
No 135 (13) 132 (97.8) 3 (2.2)
Might all the COVID-19 vaccines have the same side effects? 0.001
Yes 188 (18.1) 185 (98.4) 3 (1.6)
No 853 (81.9) 780 (91.4) 73 (8.6)
Should COVID-19 vaccination become mandatory? 0.388
Yes 474 (45.5) 443 (93.5) 31 (6.5)
No 567 (54.5) 522 (92.1) 45 (7.9)
Favorable to the adoption of the “green pass 0.4
Yes 347 (33.3) 325 (93.7) 22 (6.3)
No 694 (66.7) 640 (92.2) 54 (7.8)
Main sources of information about COVID-19 0.009
vaccination
Healthcare personnel, scientists 636 (61.1) 577 (90.7) 59 (9.3)
Mass media (i.e., television, magazines) 402 (38.6) 385 (95.8) 17 (4.2)
Social media (i.e., Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp) 3 (0.3) 3 (100) 0 (0)