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			Enhancing COVID-19 vaccination coverage using financial incentives: arguments to help health providers counterbalance erroneous claims							
		
		Jelena Dotlic, Vida Jeremic Stojkovic, Paul Cummins, Marija Milic, Tatjana Gazibara		
			Epidemiol Health. 2021;43:e2021081.   Published online October 6, 2021		
							DOI: https://doi.org/10.4178/epih.e2021081
					
					 
		
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						 Abstract  Summary  PDF
		AbstractFinancial reimbursements after receiving the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine have been criticized in the literature. This strategy has been described as payment to receive the vaccines, undue inducement, and unethical. We are aware that healthcare workers who work in primary healthcare, prevention, and public health may encounter similar reasons from people who refuse vaccination against COVID-19. For this reason, we are compelled to clarify these claims and provide arguments for all healthcare workers who might be challenged by such reasoning. In this critical review, we discuss why the claims against financial incentives that have been presented in the literature are erroneous.
			Summary 
			
						
			Key MessageWhen assessing the ethics of financial incentives to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, we must not confuse matters by invoking ethical concepts that are not relevant to this public health issue; calling a financial incentive an "undue inducement" is a mistake because it assumes that it would distort a potential recipient’s judgment to take on unacceptable risk, when these vaccines have already been tested and authorized by regulatory agencies, which suggests the risk is not substantial, but quite the opposite - they benefit the recipients.
 
			Citations Citations to this article as recorded by   Incentives for COVID-19 Vaccination: Implications for Public Health Preparedness in a New PandemicBranko Beronja, Jelena Dotlic, Vida Jeremic Stojkovic, Paul Cummins, Marija Milic, Tatjana Gazibara
 Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
Immunity Awareness—Strategies to Improve the Degree of Acceptance of Vaccines: A Systematic ReviewAlejandro Martínez-Serrano, Montserrat Pulido-Fuentes, Blanca Notario-Pacheco, Ana María Palmar-Santos, Ana Isabel Cobo-Cuenca, Ana Díez-Fernández
 Vaccines.2025; 13(6): 618.     CrossRef
Exploring the Views of Barbers and Stylists on the Acceptability of Delivering Community-Based Interventions to Promote COVID-19 Testing and Vaccination in South CarolinaPaddington T. Mundagowa, Sachi Vora, Fatima Seck, Neal Dhankhode, Kwame S. Sakyi, Mufaro Kanyangarara
 Vaccines.2024; 12(9): 1011.     CrossRef
Role of new vaccinators/pharmacists in life-course vaccinationT. Mark Doherty, Lois Privor-Dumm
 Annals of Medicine.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
The effectiveness of financial incentives for COVID-19 vaccination: A systematic reviewGabriela K. Khazanov, Rebecca Stewart, Matteo F. Pieri, Candice Huang, Christopher T. Robertson, K. Aleks Schaefer, Hansoo Ko, Jessica Fishman
 Preventive Medicine.2023; 172: 107538.     CrossRef
Mandatory and seasonal vaccination against COVID-19: Attitudes of the vaccinated people in SerbiaVerica Jovanovic, Marija Milic, Jelena Dotlic, Smiljana Cvjetkovic, Vida Jeremic Stojkovic, Natasa Maksimovic, Maja Sekulic, Tatjana Gazibara
 Epidemiology and Infection.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
Letter to the Editor: Financial incentives for COVID-19 vaccinationHyuncheol Bryant Kim
 Epidemiology and Health.2021; 43: e2021088.     CrossRef
Letter to the Editor: Enhancing COVID-19 vaccination coverage using financial incentives: arguments to help health providers counterbalance erroneous claimsYong-jun Choi
 Epidemiology and Health.2021; 43: e2021087.     CrossRef
Authors’ Reply: Vaccination, payment, and COVID-19Jelena Dotlic, Vida Jeremic Stojkovic, Paul Cummins, Marija Milic, Tatjana Gazibara
 Epidemiology and Health.2021; 43: e2021100.     CrossRef
 
	
		
			Authors’ Reply: Vaccination, payment, and COVID-19							
		
		Jelena Dotlic, Vida Jeremic Stojkovic, Paul Cummins, Marija Milic, Tatjana Gazibara		
			Epidemiol Health. 2021;43:e2021100.   Published online November 23, 2021		
							DOI: https://doi.org/10.4178/epih.e2021100
					
					 
		
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		Abstract
			Summary 
			
			
		
		
				
			Citations Citations to this article as recorded by   Incentives for COVID-19 Vaccination: Implications for Public Health Preparedness in a New PandemicBranko Beronja, Jelena Dotlic, Vida Jeremic Stojkovic, Paul Cummins, Marija Milic, Tatjana Gazibara
 Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
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