Manca T A, Top K A, Graham J E
Faculty of Health Disciplines, Athabasca University, 1 University Drive, Athabasca, Alberta, T9S 3A3, Canada.
Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology, Dalhousie University, Room 1128, Marion McCain Arts and Social Sciences Building, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 4R2, Canada.
SSM Qual Res Health. 2023 Jun;3:100265. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmqr.2023.100265. Epub 2023 Apr 10.
Early in COVID-19 vaccine rollout, expert recommendations about vaccination while pregnant and breastfeeding changed rapidly. This paper addresses the (re)production of gendered power relations in these expert discourses and recommendations in Canada. We collected texts about COVID-19 vaccine use in pregnancy (N = 52) that Canadian health organizations (e.g., professional societies, advisory groups, health authorities) and vaccine manufacturers made publicly available online. A discourse analysis was undertaken to investigate intertextuality (relations between texts), social construction (incorporation of assumptions about gender), and contradictions between and within texts. National expert recommendations varied in stating COVID-19 vaccines , , or , while manufacturer texts consistently stated there was no evidence. Provincial and territorial texts reproduced discrepancies between the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada and National Advisory Committee on Immunization recommendations, including that COVID-19 vaccines versus offered in pregnancy. Our findings suggest gaps in data and discrepant COVID-19 vaccine recommendations, eligibility, and messaging limit guidance regarding vaccination in pregnancy. We argue that these discrepancies magnified the already common practice of deferring responsibility for the uncertainties of vaccination in pregnancy onto parents and healthcare providers. The deferral of responsibility could be reduced by harmonizing recommendations, regularly updating texts that describe evidence and recommendations, and prioritizing research into disease burden, vaccine safety, and efficacy vaccine rollout.
在新冠疫苗推出初期,关于孕期和哺乳期接种疫苗的专家建议迅速变化。本文探讨了加拿大这些专家论述和建议中性别权力关系的(再)产生。我们收集了加拿大卫生组织(如专业协会、咨询小组、卫生当局)和疫苗制造商在网上公开的关于孕期使用新冠疫苗的文本(N = 52)。进行了话语分析,以调查互文性(文本之间的关系)、社会建构(对性别的假设的纳入)以及文本之间和内部的矛盾。国家专家建议在说明新冠疫苗 、 或 方面存在差异,而制造商的文本则一致表示没有证据。省级和地区文本再现了加拿大妇产科学会和国家免疫咨询委员会建议之间的差异,包括孕期提供的新冠疫苗 与 的对比。我们的研究结果表明,数据方面的差距以及新冠疫苗建议、资格和信息传达方面的差异限制了关于孕期接种疫苗的指导。我们认为,这些差异放大了将孕期接种疫苗不确定性的责任推给父母和医疗服务提供者这一早已普遍存在的做法。通过统一建议、定期更新描述证据和建议的文本以及优先开展关于疾病负担、疫苗安全性和有效性 疫苗推出情况的研究,可以减少责任推诿。