Bon Helena Ballester, Brouwers Symen A, Mote Jenna, de Almeida Sofia, Markle Laurie, Sommariva Silvia, Fol Natalie
Eastern and Southern Africa Regional Office, Social and Behavior Change, UNICEF, Nairobi, Kenya.
Internet of Good Things, UNICEF HQ, New York, NY, USA.
BMC Proc. 2023 Jul 12;17(Suppl 7):14. doi: 10.1186/s12919-023-00262-1.
In 2021, twenty out of twenty-one countries in the Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) region introduced COVID-19 vaccines. With variable willingness to uptake vaccines across countries, the aim of the present study was to better understand factors that impact behavioral and social drivers of vaccination (BeSD). Using the theory-based "increasing vaccination model", the drivers Thinking & Feeling, Social Processes, Motivation, and Practical Issues were adapted to the COVID-19 context and utilized in a cross-country assessment.
Data was collected on 27.240 health workers in Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa and South Sudan. This was done by administering a survey of seven target questions via the UNICEF Internet of Good Things (IoGT) online platform between February and August 2021.
Findings showed a gap between perceived importance and trust in vaccines: Most health workers thought Covid-19 vaccination was very important for their health, while less than 30% trusted it very much. The pro-vaccination social and work norm was not well established since almost 66% of all respondents would take the vaccine if recommended to them, but only 49% thought most adults would, and only 48% thought their co-workers would. Access was highlighted as a crucial barrier, with less than a quarter reporting that accessing vaccination services for themselves would be very easy. Women exhibited slightly lower scores than men across the board. When testing the associations between drivers in Kenya and South Africa, it appears that when target interventions are developed for specific age groups, social norms become the main drivers of intention to get vaccinated.
The present study revealed various key relations with demographic variables that would help immunization programmes and implementing partners to develop targeted interventions. First, there is a serious gap between perceived importance of COVID-19 vaccines and how much trust people in them. Second, problems with access are still rather serious and solving this would strongly benefit those who demand a vaccine, Third, the role of social norms is the most important predictor of willingness when considering age differences.
2021年,东部和南部非洲(ESA)地区21个国家中的20个国家引入了新冠疫苗。由于各国对疫苗接种的意愿各不相同,本研究的目的是更好地了解影响疫苗接种行为和社会驱动因素(BeSD)的因素。利用基于理论的“增加疫苗接种模型”,将思维与情感、社会过程、动机和实际问题等驱动因素应用于新冠疫情背景,并用于跨国评估。
收集了肯尼亚、马拉维、莫桑比克、南非和南苏丹27240名卫生工作者的数据。这是通过2021年2月至8月期间通过联合国儿童基金会美好事物互联网(IoGT)在线平台对七个目标问题进行调查来完成的。
研究结果显示,在对疫苗的认知重要性和信任度之间存在差距:大多数卫生工作者认为新冠疫苗接种对他们的健康非常重要,但只有不到30%的人非常信任它。支持接种疫苗的社会和工作规范尚未很好地确立,因为几乎66%的受访者表示,如果被推荐,他们会接种疫苗,但只有49%的人认为大多数成年人会接种,只有48%的人认为他们的同事会接种。获取疫苗被突出为一个关键障碍,不到四分之一的人表示为自己获取疫苗接种服务非常容易。女性在各项指标上的得分略低于男性。在测试肯尼亚和南非的驱动因素之间的关联时,似乎当针对特定年龄组制定目标干预措施时,社会规范成为接种疫苗意愿的主要驱动因素。
本研究揭示了与人口统计学变量的各种关键关系,这将有助于免疫规划和实施伙伴制定有针对性的干预措施。第一,新冠疫苗的认知重要性与人们对其的信任程度之间存在严重差距。第二,获取疫苗的问题仍然相当严重,解决这一问题将极大地惠及那些需要疫苗的人。第三,在考虑年龄差异时,社会规范的作用是意愿的最重要预测因素。