Background
Epidemiological data indicate that a large part of population needs to be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity. Hence, it is of high importance for public health officials to know whether people are going to get vaccinated for COVID-19. The objective of the present study was to examine the willingness of adult residents in Greece to receive a COVID-19 vaccine.
Methods
A cross-sectional was survey conducted among the adult general population of Greece between April 28, 2020 to May 03, 2020 (last week of lockdown), using a mixed methodology for data collection: Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) and Computer Assisted web Interviewing (CAWI). Using a sample size calculator, the target sample size was found to be around 1000 respondents. To ensure a nationally representative sample of the urban/rural population according to the Greek census 2011, a proportionate stratified by region systematic sampling procedure was used to recruit particpants. Data collection was guided through a structured questionnaire. Regarding willingness to COVID-19 vaccination, participants were asked to answer the following question: “If there was a vaccine available for the novel coronavirus, would you do it?”
Results
Of 1004 respondents only 57.7% stated that they are going to get vaccinated for COVID-19. Respondents aged > 65 years old, those who either themselves or a member of their household belonged to a vulnerable group, those believing that the COVID-19 virus was not developed in laboratories by humans, those believing that coronavirus is far more contagious and lethal compared to the H1N1 virus, and those believing that next waves are coming were statistically significantly more likely to be willing to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Higher knowledge score regarding symptoms, transmission routes and prevention and control measures against COVID-19 was significantly associated with higher willingness of respondents to get vaccinated.
Conclusion
A significant proportion of individuals in the general population are unwilling to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, stressing the need for public health officials to take immediate awareness-raising measures.
: High-quality magnesium hydroxide powders can be produced by hydrating slow-reacting magnesia in dilute magnesium acetate solutions. The kinetics of this process are very crucial for process design and control, and for the production of a powder with desirable particle morphology. In this work, industrial heavily-burned magnesia powders were hydrated in 0.01-0.1 mol dm-3 magnesium acetate solutions at temperatures ranging between 333 and 363 K. Examination of the magnesium hydroxide produced and the analysis of the kinetic data suggest that the hydration of heavily burned magnesia in magnesium acetate solutions is a dissolution-precipitation process controlled by the dissolution of magnesia particles. The activation energy was estimated to be 60 kJ mol-1, while the reaction order with respect to acetate concentration was found to be about one.1999 Society of Chemical Industry (
Arsenic is a major contaminant in the nonferrous extractive metallurgy. In the past 20 years, many studies have shown that it can be precipitated as relatively stable crystalline scorodite (FeAsO 4 • 2H 2 O) by precipitation under ambient or elevated pressures. In the present study, an extensive program of scorodite precipitation tests under ambient pressure has shown that the rate of scorodite formation increases dramatically by a small increase in temperature from 85 °C to 100 °C. The beneficial effects of temperature are attributed to the higher thermodynamic stability of scorodite at elevated temperatures, but also to higher rates of secondary nuclei formation and crystal growth. In any case, irrespective of the precipitation temperature, the leachability of all scorodite precipitates observed in toxicity characterization leaching procedure (TCLP) tests is below 5 mg/L As. Another parameter examined in this study was seeding. It was observed that the higher the initial concentration of seed, the faster the precipitation. Precipitation of well-crystallized scorodite can be effected equally well on heterogeneous seed such as hematite (Fe 2 O 3 ) or gypsum (CaSO 4 • 2H 2 O) added externally or formed in situ.
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