医学
塞拉利昂
住所
横断面研究
农村地区
接种疫苗
大众传媒
环境卫生
人口
人口学
公共卫生
社会经济学
免疫学
护理部
业务
病理
社会学
广告
作者
Sylvain Landry Faye,Ralf Krumkamp,Seydou Doumbia,Moctar Tounkara,Ricardo Strauss,Henri Gautier Ouédraogo,Tani Sagna,Alpha Barry,Abdul Karim Mbawah,Cheick Oumar Doumbia,Souleymane Diouf,Kadari Cissé,Mohamed Harding,Paule Donven,Jürgen May,Dewi Ismajani Puradiredja,Daniela Fusco
出处
期刊:BMJ Open
[BMJ]
日期:2022-04-01
卷期号:12 (4): e059138-e059138
被引量:22
标识
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2021-059138
摘要
This study aims: (1) to identify and describe similarities and differences in both adult and child COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, and (2) to examine sociodemographic, perception-related and behavioural factors influencing vaccine hesitancy across five West African countries.Cross-sectional survey carried out between 5 May and 5 June 2021.4198 individuals from urban and rural settings in Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali, Senegal and Sierra Leone participated in the survey.The general protocol is registered on clinicaltrial.gov.Findings show that in West Africa at the time only 53% of all study participants reported to be aware of COVID-19 vaccines, and television (60%, n=1345), radio (56%; n=1258), social media (34%; n=764) and family/friends/neighbours (28%; n=634) being the most important sources of information about COVID-19 vaccines. Adult COVID-19 vaccine acceptance ranges from 60% in Guinea and 50% in Sierra Leone to 11% in Senegal. This is largely congruent with acceptance levels of COVID-19 vaccinations for children. Multivariable regression analysis shows that perceived effectiveness and safety of COVID-19 vaccines increased the willingness to get vaccinated. However, sociodemographic factors, such as sex, rural/urban residence, educational attainment and household composition (living with children and/or elderly), and the other perception parameters were not associated with the willingness to get vaccinated in the multivariable regression model.Primary sources of information about COVID-19 vaccines include television, radio and social media. Communication strategies addressed at the adult population using mass and social media, which emphasise COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness and safety, could encourage greater acceptance also of COVID-19 child vaccinations in sub-Saharan countries.NCT04912284.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI