Demand Creation for COVID-19 Vaccination: Overcoming Vaccine Hesitancy through Social Marketing
Título
Demand Creation for COVID-19 Vaccination: Overcoming Vaccine Hesitancy through Social Marketing
Autor
William Douglas Evans, Jeff French
Descripción
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to millions of deaths and tested the capabilities of the medical and public health systems worldwide. Over the next two years as more approved vaccines are made available and supply meets or exceeds demand, medical and public health professionals will increasingly be faced with the challenge of vaccine hesitancy. There is an urgent need to create demand in groups that are either uninformed, vaccine hesitant, or actively resistant to COVID-19 vaccination. This study reviews theory, evidence, and practice recommendations to develop a vaccine demand creation strategy that has wide applicability. Specifically, we focus on key elements including supply side confidence, vaccine brand promotion strategy, service marketing as it relates to vaccine distribution, and competition strategy. We present evidence that these strategies can make a significant contribution to overcoming COVID-19 hesitancy in a high supply scenario. The paper also makes recommendations about factors that need to be considered in relation to vaccine delivery services and systems that, if done badly, may reduce uptake or result in the creation of more vaccine hesitancy. In summary, there is a need for well researched and tested demand creation strategies that integrate with brand strategy, supply side, and service delivery.
Fecha
2021
Materia
covid-19, Vaccination, health communication, social marketing, Vaccine hesitancy, demand creation
Identificador
10.3390/vaccines9040319
Fuente
Epidemiology and Health
Editor
Korean Society of Epidemiology
Cobertura
Medicine
Colección
Citación
William Douglas Evans, Jeff French, “Demand Creation for COVID-19 Vaccination: Overcoming Vaccine Hesitancy through Social Marketing,” SOCICT Open, consulta 18 de abril de 2026, https://www.socictopen.socict.org/items/show/9426.
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