Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/35066, first published .
How Vaccine Ambivalence Can Lead People Who Inject Drugs to Decline COVID-19 Vaccination and Ways This Can Be Addressed: Qualitative Study

How Vaccine Ambivalence Can Lead People Who Inject Drugs to Decline COVID-19 Vaccination and Ways This Can Be Addressed: Qualitative Study

How Vaccine Ambivalence Can Lead People Who Inject Drugs to Decline COVID-19 Vaccination and Ways This Can Be Addressed: Qualitative Study

Ian David Aronson   1 , MA, PhD ;   Alex S Bennett   1 , PhD ;   Mary-Andrée Ardouin-Guerrier   1 , EdD ;   German Rivera-Castellar   1 , MS ;   Brent Gibson   2 , PhD ;   Samantha Santoscoy   2 , BA ;   Brittney Vargas-Estrella   2 , BA

1 Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, NY, United States

2 New York Harm Reduction Educators, New York, NY, United States

Corresponding Author:

  • Ian David Aronson, MA, PhD
  • Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences
  • School of Global Public Health
  • New York University
  • 708 Broadway
  • New York, NY, 10003
  • United States
  • Phone: 1 (212) 992-6741
  • Email: ia14@nyu.edu