Jordan D. Kurth

Research Assistant Professor


Curriculum vitae



General Internal Medicine

Penn State College of Medicine



Closing the Gap on COVID-19 Vaccinations in First Responders and Beyond: Increasing Trust


Journal article


M. Gregory, Sarah Macewan, A. Gaughan, L. Rush, Jonathan R Powell, Jordan D. Kurth, E. Kenah, A. Panchal, Ann Scheck McAlearney
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2022

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Gregory, M., Macewan, S., Gaughan, A., Rush, L., Powell, J. R., Kurth, J. D., … McAlearney, A. S. (2022). Closing the Gap on COVID-19 Vaccinations in First Responders and Beyond: Increasing Trust. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Gregory, M., Sarah Macewan, A. Gaughan, L. Rush, Jonathan R Powell, Jordan D. Kurth, E. Kenah, A. Panchal, and Ann Scheck McAlearney. “Closing the Gap on COVID-19 Vaccinations in First Responders and Beyond: Increasing Trust.” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Gregory, M., et al. “Closing the Gap on COVID-19 Vaccinations in First Responders and Beyond: Increasing Trust.” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{m2022a,
  title = {Closing the Gap on COVID-19 Vaccinations in First Responders and Beyond: Increasing Trust},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health},
  author = {Gregory, M. and Macewan, Sarah and Gaughan, A. and Rush, L. and Powell, Jonathan R and Kurth, Jordan D. and Kenah, E. and Panchal, A. and McAlearney, Ann Scheck}
}

Abstract

Although COVID-19 vaccines are widely available in the U.S. and much of the world, many have chosen to forgo this vaccination. Emergency medical services (EMS) professionals, despite their role on the frontlines and interactions with COVID-positive patients, are not immune to vaccine hesitancy. Via a survey conducted in April 2021, we investigated the extent to which first responders in the U.S. trusted various information sources to provide reliable information about COVID-19 vaccines. Those vaccinated generally trusted healthcare providers as a source of information, but unvaccinated first responders had fairly low trust in this information source—a group to which they, themselves, belong. Additionally, regardless of vaccination status, trust in all levels of government, employers, and their community as sources of information was low. Free-response explanations provided some context to these findings, such as preference for other COVID-19 management options, including drugs proven ineffective. A trusted source of COVID-19 vaccination information is not readily apparent. Individuals expressed a strong desire for the autonomy to make vaccination decisions for themselves, as opposed to mandates. Potential reasons for low trust, possible solutions to address them, generalizability to the broader public, and implications of low trust in official institutions are discussed.


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