接种疫苗
医学
公共卫生
家庭医学
灰色文学
置信区间
环境卫生
发达国家
医疗保健
梅德林
荟萃分析
免疫
低信心
公众信任
疫苗效力
发展中国家
初级保健
主题(计算)
替代医学
系统回顾
疫苗可预防疾病
人口学
作者
Kaja Damnjanović,Kalin Djurov,Matea Galic,Bogdan Lisul,Ionut Viorel Mocanu,Shreya Shukla,A Enstone,Lisa Dai,Mitja Vrdelja,Hristiana Batselova,Anca Cristina Drăgănescu,Goran Tešović
出处
期刊:Vaccines
[Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute]
日期:2026-03-27
卷期号:14 (4): 299-299
标识
DOI:10.3390/vaccines14040299
摘要
OBJECTIVES: Despite vaccination being the most effective way of preventing infections and vaccination rates recovering worldwide after the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccine hesitancy persists. Some factors, such as psychological and social barriers, can negatively impact views on vaccines and can contribute to vaccine hesitancy. The primary objective of this structured literature review is to investigate the available evidence relating to factors affecting vaccine hesitancy within several countries in Southeastern Europe. METHODS: An electronic database search was conducted to identify studies assessing the public and healthcare professionals' (HCPs) attitudes towards vaccination in Southeastern Europe. These searches were supplemented with grey literature searches. Included studies were conducted in Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania, Serbia, and Slovenia between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2022. RESULTS: Of the 35 studies identified from the database searches, the most prominent theme observed across Romania, Croatia, and Bulgaria was low confidence in COVID-19 vaccines. Across all age groups, COVID-19 vaccine confidence in these regions was highly dependent on whether individuals thought vaccines were safe and effective, as well as their general trust in vaccines. Confidence in COVID-19 vaccines was seen as relatively high, with attitudes towards routine and elective vaccines being generally positive amongst the general public and HCPs, in Romania, Croatia, Serbia and Slovenia. However, uncertainty around the effectiveness of the vaccine still exists. In Bulgaria, trust in routine and elective vaccines remained low in the general public. Complacency and financial constraints were also identified as underlying causes of vaccine hesitancy. CONCLUSIONS: The main cause behind vaccine hesitancy in several countries in Southeastern Europe is distrust in vaccine effectiveness and safety. These key findings can be utilised to support evidence-based decisions regarding where to focus resources to improve public and HCP perception of vaccines in Southeastern Europe.
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