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Vaccination Refusal clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05891626 Active, not recruiting - Vaccination Refusal Clinical Trials

Group Intervention on Vaccine Confidence

Start date: August 2, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study has one primary objective and two secondary objectives, with an overall goal of understanding barriers to vaccination and vaccination confidence, so that effective interventional strategies can be further developed and tested to improve vaccination outcomes in a community healthcare setting.

NCT ID: NCT05479383 Active, not recruiting - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Tobacco Use and Uptake of COVID-19 Vaccinations

Start date: October 2, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is an observational study of participants in two general population health surveys (FinSote 2018 and 2020) who are followed up for their COVID-19 vaccinations or end of follow-up. The primary objective is to examine the association between tobacco use and COVID-19 vaccine uptake and between-dose spacing.

NCT ID: NCT05419232 Active, not recruiting - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

COVID-19 Vaccine Uptake Trial

Start date: July 15, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to assess the best COVID-19 vaccine uptake strategy among students, staff and household members that have not been vaccinated. There is a multitude of recommendations present that highlight different vaccination strategy; however, it is still unclear which strategy is best to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates. We will compare the effectiveness and acceptance of two different communication strategies among unvaccinated students, staff, and their household members.

NCT ID: NCT04779827 Active, not recruiting - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Improving Health Equity for COVID-19 Vaccination for At-risk Populations Using Online Social Networks

Start date: May 4, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Social technologies for health have already become essential means for providing underserved populations greater social connectedness and increased access to novel health information. However, these technologies have also had negative unintended consequences. The resulting digital divide in social technology takes many forms - from explicit racism that excludes African American and Latinx populations from the resources enjoyed by White and Asian members of online communities, to self-segregation for the purposes of identity preservation and community-building that unintentionally results in limited informational diversity in underserved communities. The result is an often unnoticed, but highly consequential compounding of inequities. This research seeks to use an online social network approach to address these challenges, in which the investigators demonstrate how reducing the online levels of network centralization and network homophily among African American community members directly increases their productive engagement with health-promoting information.