Abstract
Vaccination remains one of the most cost-effective methods for disease prevention. However, utilization of self-paid vaccines, including EV71, varicella, influenza, and DTaP-IPV-Hib in this study, remains insufficient among children under six in China. To investigate the determinants of willingness to vaccinate (WTV) for self-paid vaccines and assess cost-WTV heterogeneity, we conducted structured-questionnaire surveys with 2212 randomly selected households in Hangzhou, each with at least one child under six. Multiple regression analysis was used to identify the key determinants of WTV, and a mixed-effect model was employed to analyze the correlation between vaccine cost and WTV, further segmenting the data with unsupervised clustering techniques. Our findings highlighted impact of vaccination cost as a pivotal factor influencing the WTV for self-paid vaccines. We categorized the population into four groups based on their sensitivity to vaccine cost. Families with one child, children aged 1-3 y, highly-educated parents, and higher socioeconomic status consistently exhibited high WTV. Our analysis offers targeted strategies to enhance vaccine uptake and improve immunization coverage.