Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Department of Community Medicine and School of Public Health, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
PLoS One. 2022 Jun 9;17(6):e0269606. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269606. eCollection 2022.
Few studies have described the drivers of vaccine hesitancy and acceptance in India from the perspective of those involved in the design and implementation of vaccine campaigns-such as government officials and civil society stakeholders-a prerequisite to developing approaches to address this barrier to high immunization coverage and further child health improvements.
We conducted a qualitative study to understand government officials and civil society stakeholders' perceptions of the drivers of vaccine hesitancy in India. We conducted in-depth phone interviews using a structured guide of open-ended questions with 21 participants from international and national non-governmental organizations, professional associations, and universities, and state and national government-six national-level stakeholders in New Delhi, six state-level stakeholders in Uttar Pradesh, six in Kerala, and three in Gujarat-from July 2020 to October 2020. We analyzed data through a multi-stage process following Grounded Theory. We present findings on individual-level, contextual, and vaccine/vaccination program-specific factors influencing vaccine hesitancy.
We identified multiple drivers and complex ways they influence vaccine beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors from the perspective of government officials and civil society stakeholders involved in vaccine campaigns. Important individual-level influences were low awareness of the benefits of vaccination, safety concerns, especially related to mild adverse events following immunization, and mistrust in government and health service quality. Contextual-level factors included communications, the media environment, and social media, which serves as a major conduit of misinformation and driver of hesitancy, as well as sociodemographic factors-specific drivers varied widely by income, education, urban/rural setting, and across religious and cultural groups. Among vaccine/vaccination-level issues, vaccine program design and delivery and the role of health care professionals emerged as the strongest determinants of hesitancy.
Drivers of vaccine hesitancy in India, as elsewhere, vary widely by local context; successful interventions should address individual, contextual, and vaccine-specific factors. While previous studies focused on individual-level factors, our study demonstrates the equal importance of contextual and vaccine-specific influences, especially the communication and media environment, influential leaders, sociodemographic factors, and frontline health workers.
几乎没有研究从参与疫苗活动设计和实施的人员(如政府官员和民间社会利益攸关方)的角度描述印度疫苗犹豫和接受的驱动因素——这是制定解决这一阻碍高免疫覆盖率和进一步改善儿童健康的方法的前提。
我们进行了一项定性研究,以了解政府官员和民间社会利益攸关方对印度疫苗犹豫的驱动因素的看法。我们使用开放式问题的结构化指南,通过电话对 21 名来自国际和国家非政府组织、专业协会和大学以及州和国家政府的参与者进行了深入的访谈,这些参与者分别来自新德里的 6 个国家级利益攸关方、北方邦的 6 个州级利益攸关方、喀拉拉邦的 6 个州级利益攸关方和古吉拉特邦的 3 个州级利益攸关方。我们通过遵循扎根理论的多阶段过程分析数据。我们展示了从参与疫苗活动的政府官员和民间社会利益攸关方的角度影响疫苗犹豫的个人层面、背景和疫苗/疫苗接种计划特定因素的调查结果。
我们从参与疫苗活动的政府官员和民间社会利益攸关方的角度确定了多种驱动因素和复杂的方式,这些因素影响了疫苗的信念、态度和行为。重要的个人层面影响因素包括对疫苗接种益处的认识不足、对安全性的担忧,特别是与接种疫苗后出现的轻微不良事件有关的担忧,以及对政府和医疗服务质量的不信任。背景层面的因素包括沟通、媒体环境和社交媒体,它们是错误信息的主要渠道,也是犹豫不决的驱动因素,社会人口因素——特定驱动因素因收入、教育、城乡环境以及宗教和文化群体而异。在疫苗/疫苗接种层面的问题中,疫苗计划的设计和实施以及医疗保健专业人员的作用成为犹豫不决的最强决定因素。
与其他地方一样,印度疫苗犹豫的驱动因素因当地情况而异;成功的干预措施应解决个人、背景和疫苗特定因素。虽然之前的研究侧重于个人层面的因素,但我们的研究表明背景和疫苗特定因素同等重要,特别是沟通和媒体环境、有影响力的领导者、社会人口因素和一线卫生工作者。