TY - JOUR T1 - Can shared decision making address COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy? JF - BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine JO - BMJ EBM DO - 10.1136/bmjebm-2021-111695 SP - bmjebm-2021-111695 AU - Marie-Anne Durand AU - Peter Scalia AU - Glyn Elwyn Y1 - 2021/04/25 UR - http://ebm.bmj.com/content/early/2021/04/25/bmjebm-2021-111695.abstract N2 - The COVID-19 pandemic continues to affect millions of people worldwide. While hygiene, behavioural measures and government-driven restrictions are in place, a globally implemented vaccination programme shows promise at mitigating the levels of illness and mortality caused by the virus.1The exceptional magnitude of the pandemic, combined with the unprecedented speed of vaccine development has caused difficulty ensuring that information is neutral, standardised, coherent and evidence-based.2 As a result, misinformation about the virus and the COVID-19 vaccine, often combined with conspiracy theories, has become a major threat to uptake.3–5 A recent study about COVID-19 misinformation in national samples across five countries showed that misinformation negatively affected people’s self-reported compliance with public health recommendations and reduced people’s willingness to get vaccinated and recommend the vaccine to others.3 Misinformation increases vaccine hesitancy and threatens cooperation with vaccination programmes. Vaccine hesitancy designates the ‘delay in acceptance or refusal of vaccines despite availability of vaccination services’.6 Ensuring easy access to high quality evidence-based information about the potential harms and benefits of vaccination would increase knowledge. This in turn could help create better dialogue with healthcare professionals, minimise vaccine hesitancy and promote informed choice.Potential of shared decision makingShared decision making is an approach where health professionals, patients and caregivers share available evidence-based information while exploring the patient’s values and priorities to achieve informed preferences.7 It typically includes three elements: providing information, supporting deliberation and exploring patient preferences to form an informed choice.7 8 This process may or may not be supported by a patient decision aid; a patient-facing, evidence-based intervention proven to improve decision … ER -