Peer-reviewed
Infectious Disease Reports
COVID-19 Disease and Vaccination: Knowledge, Fears, Perceptions and Feelings of Regret for Not Having Been Vaccinated among Hospitalized Greek Patients Suffering SARS-CoV-2 Infection
Cited in 2 Likelier entries (0 risks, 2 decisions).
Used in 2 entries
For each citing entry, the verbatim excerpt and Likelier's calculation notes (how the source's number was converted to the lifetime-probability framing) are shown below. Click through to read the full claim ledger.
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- Statistic
Among 162 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in two Greek tertiary care hospitals (56.2% unvaccinated, 97% with severe COVID-19), 64.7% of unvaccinated patients said they would get vaccinated 'if they could turn back time' when surveyed at discharge; 58.4% expressed this regret upon admission; 53.9% indicated willingness to vaccinate after discharge
“"Of 162 hospitalized COVID-19 patients surveyed (response rate 71.1%), 91 (56.2%) were unvaccinated at admission and 97% had severe COVID-19 disease. When unvaccinated patients were asked whether they would get vaccinated if they could turn time back, 64.7% replied positively; 58.4% expressed this regret upon admission and 53.9% indicated willingness to vaccinate after discharge. Most individuals regretted their decision not to receive a vaccine (66.0%), declared an intention to promote COVID-19 vaccination after discharge (64.0%), and to receive a COVID-19 vaccine in the time recommended for convalescents (69.5%). Hospitalization for severe COVID-19 produced a substantial shift in stated vaccine preference among previously unvaccinated patients, indicating strong post-outcome regret."”
Calculation notes
Ioannou et al. 2022 Infectious Disease Reports 14(4):587-596. Direct peer-reviewed regret survey of unvaccinated COVID-19 patients post-hospitalization — gold standard data point for the upper-bound regret rate among adults who skipped and then experienced severe disease. The 40% population-level action-side estimate is bounded below by this hospitalized-cohort 64.7% (because most skip-adults never experience severe disease) and above by typical baseline regret rates among skip-adults who remained healthy.
Source date: 2022-08-08 · Accessed: 2026-05-23
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- Statistic
Among 162 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in two Greek tertiary care hospitals (56.2% unvaccinated, 97% with severe COVID-19), 64.7% of unvaccinated patients said they would get vaccinated 'if they could turn back time' when surveyed at discharge; 58.4% expressed this regret upon admission. Reused here as a defensible proxy for hospitalized-skipper regret because no travel-vaccine-specific direct regret survey exists in the published literature
“"Of 162 hospitalized COVID-19 patients surveyed (response rate 71.1%), 91 (56.2%) were unvaccinated at admission and 97% had severe COVID-19 disease. When unvaccinated patients were asked whether they would get vaccinated if they could turn time back, 64.7% replied positively; 58.4% expressed this regret upon admission and 53.9% indicated willingness to vaccinate after discharge. Most individuals regretted their decision not to receive a vaccine (66.0%), declared an intention to promote COVID-19 vaccination after discharge (64.0%), and to receive a COVID-19 vaccine in the time recommended for convalescents (69.5%). Hospitalization for severe COVID-19 produced a substantial shift in stated vaccine preference among previously unvaccinated patients, indicating strong post-outcome regret."”
Calculation notes
Ioannou et al. 2022 Infectious Disease Reports 14(4):587-596. Reused as a defensible cross-disease proxy: the published literature contains no equivalent direct regret survey of travelers hospitalized for vaccine-preventable diseases (hep A, typhoid, yellow fever, JE). The structural decision is identical — adult declined a recommended vaccine, contracted a vaccine-preventable disease severe enough for hospital admission, was asked retrospectively about regret. The 64.7% hospitalized- cohort regret rate bounds the upper end of the population-weighted 40% action-side estimate; most travel-vaccine skippers never get hospitalized (GeoSentinel hep A denominator is the millions of unvaccinated travelers to endemic areas annually, not the ~250 sentinel cases captured), so the population-weighted regret rate runs well below the hospitalized-cohort figure. The proxy_only flag exists precisely to permit this triangulation; the entry is transparent about the absence of a direct travel-vaccine regret survey.
Source date: 2022-08-08 · Accessed: 2026-05-24