Yendewa Sahr A, Ghazzawi Manal, James Peter B, Smith Mohamed, Massaquoi Samuel P, Babawo Lawrence S, Deen Gibrilla F, Russell James B W, Samai Mohamed, Sahr Foday, Lakoh Sulaiman, Salata Robert A, Yendewa George A
Ministry of Health and Sanitation, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Connaught Hospital, University of Sierra Leone Teaching Hospitals Complex, Ministry of Health and Sanitation, Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Vaccines (Basel). 2022 May 11;10(5):757. doi: 10.3390/vaccines10050757.
Despite having safe and efficacious vaccines against COVID-19, vaccine hesitancy is widespread. Although a trusted source of information, vaccine hesitancy has been reported among healthcare professionals, yet few studies have explored this phenomenon in sub-Saharan Africa. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of healthcare professionals in Sierra Leone from January to March 2022. Measures included sociodemographic/health-related information and COVID-19-related concerns. From the responses, we constructed a hesitancy (VAX) score, with higher scores implying negative attitudes or unwillingness to vaccinate. Multivariate linear regression was used to access factors associated with vaccine hesitancy. Overall, 592 participants submitted responses (67.2% female, mean age 29 years, 5.6% physicians/pharmacists, 44.3% medical students, 29.2% nurses, 20.9% nursing students). The mean VAX score was 43.27 ± 8.77, with 60.1% of respondents classified as vaccine hesitant (>50th percentile) and 13.8% as highly hesitant (>75th percentile). Worries about unforeseen future effects (76.3%), a preference for natural immunity (59.5%), and profiteering/mistrust of health authorities (53.1%) were the most common concerns. Being a medical student (β = 0.105, p = 0.011) and previously refusing a recommended vaccine (β = 0.177, p < 0.001) were predictors of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. Our findings call for addressing vaccine hesitancy among healthcare professionals as an essential component of strategies aimed at increasing COVID-19 vaccine uptake in this setting.
尽管有安全有效的新冠疫苗,但疫苗犹豫现象却很普遍。尽管医疗保健专业人员是可靠的信息来源,但仍有报告称他们中存在疫苗犹豫情况,然而在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,很少有研究探讨这一现象。我们于2022年1月至3月对塞拉利昂的医疗保健专业人员进行了一项横断面调查。调查内容包括社会人口统计学/健康相关信息以及与新冠病毒相关的担忧。根据这些回答,我们构建了一个犹豫(VAX)评分,分数越高意味着对接种疫苗持负面态度或不愿意接种。采用多元线性回归来分析与疫苗犹豫相关的因素。总体而言,592名参与者提交了回答(女性占67.2%,平均年龄29岁,医生/药剂师占5.6%,医学生占44.3%,护士占29.2%,护理专业学生占20.9%)。VAX评分的平均值为43.27±8.77,60.1%的受访者被归类为疫苗犹豫者(高于第50百分位数),13.8%为高度犹豫者(高于第75百分位数)。对未来不可预见影响的担忧(76.3%)、对自然免疫的偏好(59.5%)以及对卫生当局的暴利行为/不信任(53.1%)是最常见的担忧。作为医学生(β = 0.105,p = 0.011)以及之前拒绝推荐疫苗(β = 0.177,p < 0.001)是新冠疫苗犹豫的预测因素。我们的研究结果呼吁将解决医疗保健专业人员中的疫苗犹豫问题作为旨在提高该地区新冠疫苗接种率的战略的重要组成部分。