Naidoo Damian, Meyer-Weitz Anna, Govender Kaymarlin
Discipline of Psychology, School of Applied Human Sciences, Howard College, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 4041, South Africa.
Health Promotion Unit, KwaZulu-Natal Department of Health, Pietermaritzburg, Private Bag X9051, Pietermaritzburg 3200, South Africa.
Vaccines (Basel). 2023 Apr 20;11(4):873. doi: 10.3390/vaccines11040873.
The COVID-19 pandemic is a severe concern worldwide, particularly in Africa. Vaccines are crucial in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. This scoping review examined existing literature from 2020 to 2022 on individual, interpersonal, and structural barriers and facilitators to COVID-19 vaccination within Africa to facilitate more informed health promotion interventions to improve vaccine uptake. This review was conducted using Arksey and O'Malley's five-stage methodological framework. A comprehensive search was undertaken from 2021 to 2022 using six electronic databases: EBSCOhost, PubMed, Web of Science, ProQuest, WorldCat Discovery, and Google Scholar. Data was collected, charted into themes, and summarized using a standard data extraction sheet in Microsoft Excel. A total of forty ( = 40) published academic articles were reviewed, with many conducted in Nigeria ( = 10), followed by Ethiopia ( = 5) and Ghana ( = 4) and the rest elsewhere in Africa. Thematic narratives were used to report data into six themes: attitudes and perceptions about COVID-19 vaccines, intention to uptake COVID-19 vaccines; factors and barriers associated with COVID-19 vaccine uptake; socio-demographic determinants affecting the intention and uptake; and information sources for COVID-19 vaccines. The intention for uptake ranged from 25% to 80.9%, resulting in a suboptimal uptake intention rate (54.2%) on the African continent. Factors that promoted vaccine acceptance included confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines and the desire to protect people. Age, education, and gender were the most common factors significantly associated with vaccine acceptance. Most studies revealed that considerable barriers to vaccine uptake exist in Africa. Concerns about potential side effects, vaccine ineffectiveness, a perceived lack of information, and inaccessibility were among the individual, interpersonal, and structural barriers to COVID-19 vaccine uptake. The unwillingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine was strongly correlated with being female. Mass and social media were the main sources of information regarding COVID-19 vaccines. To encourage vaccine uptake, governments should pay attention to refuting misinformation through integrated community-based approaches, such as creating messages that convey more than just information.
新冠疫情是全球尤其是非洲地区极为关注的问题。疫苗在抗击新冠疫情中至关重要。本综述研究了2020年至2022年期间关于非洲地区新冠疫苗接种的个人、人际和结构障碍及促进因素的现有文献,以推动更明智的健康促进干预措施,提高疫苗接种率。本综述采用了阿克西和奥马利的五阶段方法框架。2021年至2022年期间,使用六个电子数据库进行了全面检索:EBSCOhost、PubMed、科学网、ProQuest、WorldCat Discovery和谷歌学术。收集数据,归纳为主题,并使用Microsoft Excel中的标准数据提取表进行总结。共审查了40篇已发表的学术文章,其中许多研究在尼日利亚进行(10篇),其次是埃塞俄比亚(5篇)和加纳(4篇),其余在非洲其他地区。采用主题叙述法将数据报告为六个主题:对新冠疫苗的态度和认知、接种新冠疫苗的意愿;与新冠疫苗接种相关的因素和障碍;影响意愿和接种的社会人口学决定因素;以及新冠疫苗的信息来源。接种意愿率在25%至80.9%之间,导致非洲大陆的接种意愿率不理想(54.2%)。促进疫苗接受的因素包括对新冠疫苗的信心以及保护他人的愿望。年龄、教育程度和性别是与疫苗接受度显著相关的最常见因素。大多数研究表明,非洲地区在疫苗接种方面存在相当大的障碍。对潜在副作用、疫苗无效性、信息不足和难以获取的担忧是新冠疫苗接种的个人、人际和结构障碍。不愿接种新冠疫苗与女性密切相关。大众媒体和社交媒体是关于新冠疫苗的主要信息来源。为鼓励疫苗接种,政府应通过基于社区的综合方法,如创建不仅传达信息的宣传内容,来关注驳斥错误信息。