Litcius/Paper detail

US consumer and healthcare professional preferences for combination COVID-19 and influenza vaccines

Christine Poulos, Philip O. Buck, Parinaz Ghaswalla, Deborah Rudin, Cannon Kent, Darshan Mehta

2025Journal of Medical Economics7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: To quantify preferences for an adult combination vaccine for influenza and COVID-19 (flu + COVID) compared with standalone influenza and COVID-19 vaccines. MATERIALS AND METHODS: = 299). Response frequencies described the proportion of each sample that would prefer a flu + COVID vaccine to standalone influenza and COVID-19 vaccines. A multivariate logit regression model explored how certain characteristics influenced the odds of selecting the flu + COVID vaccine over a standalone influenza vaccine. RESULTS: Most consumers (398/601; 66.2%) and HCPs (250/298; 83.9%) preferred a flu + COVID vaccine to a standalone influenza vaccine. When not forced to choose between flu + COVID and standalone influenza vaccines, most consumers again selected the flu + COVID vaccine (62.3%); 14.7% would prefer separate standalone influenza and COVID-19 vaccines, 8.3% a standalone influenza vaccine only, 7.3% a COVID-19 vaccine only, and 7.4% neither vaccine. Consumers aged ≥50 years with a body mass index ≥40, those aged ≥65 years who previously received a COVID-19 vaccine, and those who had previously experienced severe impacts from influenza were more likely to choose a flu + COVID vaccine over a standalone influenza vaccine than were consumers without these characteristics. HCPs whose practice stocks high-dose influenza vaccines were more likely to choose the flu + COVID vaccine for patients aged ≥65 with no risk factors and patients aged 18-64 with ≥1 risk factor over the standalone influenza vaccine. LIMITATIONS: Results are subject to potential hypothetical, responder, selection, and information biases. CONCLUSIONS: Most US consumers and HCPs would likely prefer a single-shot combination flu + COVID vaccine compared with standalone influenza and COVID-19 vaccines. Given the low COVID-19 vaccination coverage rates in the US, the availability of a combination flu + COVID vaccine could help increase COVID-19 vaccine coverage.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)2019-20 coronavirus outbreakHealth careVirologySevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)PandemicInfluenza vaccineFamily medicineHealthcare systemIntensive care medicineVaccinationInternal medicineOutbreakInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseEconomicsEconomic growthInfluenza Virus Research StudiesVaccine Coverage and HesitancySARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research