Research Institute for Equitable Development, EQUIDE, Universidad Iberoamericana, Prolongación Paseo de la Reforma 880, Lomas de Santa Fe, 01219, Mexico City, Mexico.
Department of Public Health, Montclair State University, University Hall 4157, 1 Normal Ave, Montclair, NJ, 07043, USA.
Int J Equity Health. 2022 Jun 19;21(1):85. doi: 10.1186/s12939-022-01685-6.
Vaccines are effective to reduce COVID-19 related outcomes, but universal vaccination campaigns can reveal within-country access inequities. Mexico City has had high rates of COVID-19 related morbidity and mortality and a population survey warned that vaccine acceptance was lowest in older adults. Since February 2021, Mexico started a universal and free vaccination campaign prioritizing older adults. By April 17, every older adult in Mexico City had been eligible to receive the first dose. A week later, we conducted a telephone survey representative of older adults residing in Mexico City (n = 503). We asked if they received their first dose and, if they haven't, we followed-up with an open question to register their reasons. In addition to sociodemographic characteristics and food insecurity, we also inquired about vaccine hesitancy, health concerns related to COVID-19, self-rated health, comorbidities, frailty, and depression. The objective of the study was to identify the main barriers to receive the first dose of the vaccine. We estimated descriptive statistics and logistic regression models. Results show that 7.6% of older adults in Mexico City did not receive their first dose. Barriers for not receiving it were vaccine hesitancy (60.4%), not having COVID-19 health concerns (46.4%), poor self-rated health (46.7%), a previous diagnosis of depression (35.7%), low socioeconomic status (65.4%), and household food insecurity (59.8%). Responses to the open question clustered in four themes: misinformation about the process (30%), distrust of the vaccine (24%), personal health problems (24%), and difficulties to get an appointment (22%). Logistic regression models adjusted for vaccine hesitancy and revealed two distinct reasons for not having their first dose: 1) vaccine hesitancy and misinformation on COVID-19, and 2) household food insecurity. Reaching these two groups requires active and differentiated public-health measures; the first with additional information from trusted sources, and the second by facilitating vaccination in neighborhoods with high levels of food insecurity and informal labor, where missing a day's work is a strong disincentive. Vaccination campaigns need an equity lens to reach universal coverage; ensuring full access demands thorough and carefully tailored new interventions.
疫苗对于降低与 COVID-19 相关的结果是有效的,但全民疫苗接种运动可能会揭示国内获得疫苗的不平等。墨西哥城的 COVID-19 相关发病率和死亡率一直很高,一项人口调查警告称,老年人对接种疫苗的接受程度最低。自 2021 年 2 月以来,墨西哥开始了一项针对老年人的全民免费疫苗接种运动。到 4 月 17 日,墨西哥城的每位老年人都有资格接种第一剂疫苗。一周后,我们对居住在墨西哥城的老年人进行了一项电话调查(n=503)。我们询问他们是否接种了第一剂疫苗,如果没有,我们会跟进一个开放式问题,以记录他们的原因。除了社会人口特征和粮食不安全外,我们还询问了对疫苗的犹豫、与 COVID-19 相关的健康问题、自我评估的健康状况、合并症、脆弱性和抑郁。研究的目的是确定接受第一剂疫苗的主要障碍。我们估计了描述性统计数据和逻辑回归模型。结果显示,墨西哥城 7.6%的老年人尚未接种第一剂疫苗。未接种疫苗的原因包括对接种疫苗犹豫不决(60.4%)、对 COVID-19 健康问题不关注(46.4%)、自我评估健康状况不佳(46.7%)、先前诊断患有抑郁症(35.7%)、社会经济地位低(65.4%)和家庭粮食不安全(59.8%)。对开放式问题的回答集中在四个主题上:对过程的误解(30%)、对疫苗的不信任(24%)、个人健康问题(24%)和预约困难(22%)。调整了对疫苗犹豫不决的影响后,逻辑回归模型揭示了两个未接种第一剂疫苗的不同原因:1)对疫苗犹豫不决和对 COVID-19 的误解,2)家庭粮食不安全。要接触到这两个群体,需要采取积极和有区别的公共卫生措施;第一种方法是从可靠来源提供更多信息,第二种方法是通过在粮食不安全和非正规劳动力水平较高的社区便利接种疫苗来实现,在这些社区,错过一天的工作是一个很强的抑制因素。疫苗接种运动需要从公平的角度来看待,以实现全民覆盖;确保全面获得疫苗需要全面和精心定制的新干预措施。