Dhaliwal Baldeep K, Seth Rajeev, Thankachen Betty, Qaiyum Yawar, Closser Svea, Best Tyler, Shet Anita
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
International Vaccine Access Center, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Proc. 2023 Jun 30;17(Suppl 7):5. doi: 10.1186/s12919-023-00259-w.
Although immunization is one of the most successful public health interventions, vaccine hesitancy and the COVID-19 pandemic have strained health systems, contributing to global reductions in immunization coverage. Existing literature suggests that involving community members in vaccine interventions has been beneficial, but efforts to facilitate community ownership to motivate vaccine acceptance have been limited.
Our research leveraged community-based participatory research to closely involve the community from conception to implementation of an intervention to facilitate vaccine acceptance in Mewat District in Haryana, an area in India with extremely low vaccination coverage. Through the development of a community accountability board, baseline data collection on vaccination barriers and facilitators, and two human-centered design workshops, our team co-created a six-pronged intervention with community leaders and community health workers. This intervention included involving religious leaders in vaccine discussions, creating pamphlets of local vaccine champions for dissemination to parent and child caregivers, creating short videos of local leaders advocating for vaccines, implementing communication training exercises for community health workers, and implementing strategies to strengthen coordination between health workers and supervisors.
Post-intervention data suggested parents and child caregivers had improvements in knowledge of the purpose of vaccines and side effects of vaccines. They noted that the involvement of religious leaders was beneficial, they were more willing to travel to vaccinate their children, and they had fewer non-logistical reasons to refuse vaccination services. Interviews with community leaders and community health workers who were involved in the creation of the intervention suggested that they experienced higher levels of ownership, they were better equipped to address community concerns, and that vaccine misinformation decreased in the post-intervention period.
Through this unique intervention to strengthen vaccine uptake that incorporated the needs, interests, and expertise of local community members, we developed a community-driven approach to strengthen vaccine acceptance in a population with low uptake. This comprehensive approach is essential to amplify local voices, identify local concerns and advocates, and leverage bottom-up strategies to co-design successful interventions to facilitate long-term change.
尽管免疫接种是最成功的公共卫生干预措施之一,但疫苗犹豫现象以及新冠疫情给卫生系统带来了压力,导致全球免疫接种覆盖率下降。现有文献表明,让社区成员参与疫苗干预措施是有益的,但为促进社区自主推动疫苗接受度所做的努力有限。
我们的研究利用基于社区的参与性研究,从构思到实施一项干预措施,让社区密切参与其中,以促进印度哈里亚纳邦默瓦特区的疫苗接受度,该地区的疫苗接种覆盖率极低。通过成立社区问责委员会、收集关于疫苗接种障碍和促进因素的基线数据,以及举办两次以人为本的设计研讨会,我们的团队与社区领袖和社区卫生工作者共同创建了一项六管齐下的干预措施。该干预措施包括让宗教领袖参与疫苗讨论、制作当地疫苗倡导者的宣传册分发给家长和儿童护理人员、制作当地领袖倡导接种疫苗的短视频、为社区卫生工作者开展沟通培训活动,以及实施加强卫生工作者与监管人员之间协调的策略。
干预后的数据分析表明,家长和儿童护理人员对疫苗目的和副作用的了解有所改善。他们指出,宗教领袖的参与是有益的,他们更愿意带孩子去接种疫苗,拒绝接种服务的非后勤原因也减少了。对参与创建该干预措施的社区领袖和社区卫生工作者的访谈表明,他们的主人翁意识更强,更有能力解决社区关切的问题,而且在干预后时期,疫苗错误信息有所减少。
通过这项独特的干预措施来加强疫苗接种,该措施纳入了当地社区成员的需求、兴趣和专业知识,我们开发了一种由社区驱动的方法,以加强疫苗在低接种率人群中的接受度。这种全面的方法对于放大当地声音、识别当地关切问题和倡导者,以及利用自下而上的策略共同设计成功的干预措施以促进长期变革至关重要。