Department of Health Policy and Management, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Department of Community Health Sciences, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Health Syst Reform. 2021 Jan 1;7(1):e1991550. doi: 10.1080/23288604.2021.1991550.
The COVID-19 pandemic poses an extraordinary threat to the health, safety, and freedom of temporary foreign workers (TFWs). Highly effective vaccines against COVID-19 may hold an outsized benefit for TFWs, particularly those living in congregate settings where protective measures such as social distancing are not possible. While some studies of migrant destination countries have included migrants, no study to date has sought to understand variations in vaccine hesitancy among individuals in a single migrant source population across different destinations. Such a design is critical for understanding how the context of immigration affects levels of hesitancy among migrants from similar conditions of origin. This observational study leverages longitudinal data from an ongoing monthly rapid-response survey of TFWs from Bangladesh (n = 360). Overall vaccine hesitancy was 25%, with significant variation by host country. Multivariate analyses confirmed that immigration system factors and threat perception are the strongest predictors of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy for TFWs. The predicted probability of hesitancy for an undocumented TFW was 0.405, while the predicted probability for those with valid visas was 0.207 ( < .01). The probability of being hesitant for TFWs who were worried about getting COVID-19 was 0.129 compared to 0.305 ( < .01) for those who were not worried. Results reveal low vaccine hesitancy among TFWs from Bangladesh with differences in location, undocumented status, COVID-19 threat perception, and level of worry about side effects. There could be relatively high returns for targeting vaccine access and distribution to TFWs because of their high levels of vaccine acceptance.
COVID-19 大流行对临时外国工人(TFW)的健康、安全和自由构成了特殊威胁。针对 COVID-19 的高效疫苗可能对 TFW 产生巨大益处,尤其是那些生活在难以实施社交距离等保护措施的集中居住环境中的 TFW。虽然一些移民目的地国家的研究包括移民,但迄今为止,没有研究试图了解不同目的地的单个移民来源人群中个人对疫苗的犹豫程度的差异。这种设计对于理解移民背景如何影响原籍国条件相似的移民的犹豫程度至关重要。本观察性研究利用了正在进行的孟加拉国 TFW 每月快速反应调查的纵向数据(n=360)。总体疫苗犹豫率为 25%,不同收容国有显著差异。多变量分析证实,移民制度因素和威胁感知是 TFW 对 COVID-19 疫苗犹豫的最强预测因素。无证 TFW 犹豫的预测概率为 0.405,而有有效签证的 TFW 的预测概率为 0.207(<0.01)。担心感染 COVID-19 的 TFW 犹豫的可能性为 0.129,而不担心的 TFW 的可能性为 0.305(<0.01)。结果显示,来自孟加拉国的 TFW 对疫苗的犹豫程度较低,差异在于地点、无证身份、COVID-19 威胁感知和对副作用的担忧程度。针对 TFW 提供疫苗接种机会和进行疫苗分配可能会有较高的回报,因为他们对疫苗的接受程度较高。