Alabadi Marwa, Pitt Victoria, Aldawood Zakariya
School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Health and Medicine, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.
Primary Health Care Division of Qatif City, General Directorate of Health Affairs in the Eastern Region, Ministry of Health, Qatif 31911, Saudi Arabia.
Vaccines (Basel). 2023 Aug 22;11(9):1400. doi: 10.3390/vaccines11091400.
(1) Background: Immunisation is a crucial and effective method for preventing infectious diseases, with its success dependent on high immunisation rates to protect under-immunised individuals and promote herd immunity. This qualitative descriptive study is part of a larger explanatory sequential mixed method design that aims to explore factors influencing parents' decision making to complete childhood immunisation in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, a country experiencing disparities in immunisation coverage across its population. (2) Methods: The sample consisted of a subset of participants from the initial quantitative phase, which included a survey on the immunisation attitudes of parents living in Qatif. This initial phase included = 350 participants, who were over 18, had access to one of the 27 Primary Health Care (PHC) Centres in Qatif, and had a child under 24 months. This paper presents the qualitative-descriptive phase, which used a qualitative survey to gain open-ended responses from parents ( = 20) and analysed using thematic analysis. (3) Results: Participants identified certain vaccines, particularly MMR, as influencing their immunisation practices. Specific factors identified as deterring parents from immunising their children included fear of autism and other developmental delays, concerns about risks and side effects, mistrust in vaccine efficacy, and discouraging information from the media. Parents' immunisation decisions were evidently affected by policy compliance, family and friends, and social networking sites. These factors are explained through the socio-ecological model. Moreover, the COVID-19 pandemic influenced parents' decisions on vaccine completion in terms of perceived barriers, perceived benefits, and perceived trust. (4) Conclusions: By examining the social-ecological factors shaping parents' decisions to immunise their children in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, this research contributes to the literature and informs the Saudi National Childhood Immunisation Programme about factors contributing to childhood immunisation hesitancy, helping to address a critical healthcare issue.
(1)背景:免疫接种是预防传染病的关键且有效方法,其成功取决于高接种率,以保护未充分接种的个体并促进群体免疫。这项定性描述性研究是一项更大的解释性序列混合方法设计的一部分,该设计旨在探索影响沙特阿拉伯东部省份父母决定完成儿童免疫接种的因素,该国在全国人口的免疫接种覆盖率方面存在差异。(2)方法:样本包括来自初始定量阶段的一部分参与者,该阶段包括对居住在卡提夫的父母的免疫接种态度进行调查。这个初始阶段有350名参与者,他们年龄超过18岁,可使用卡提夫的27个初级卫生保健中心之一,并且有一个24个月以下的孩子。本文呈现定性描述阶段,该阶段使用定性调查从父母(n = 20)那里获得开放式回答,并使用主题分析进行分析。(3)结果:参与者确定某些疫苗,特别是麻疹、腮腺炎和风疹联合疫苗(MMR),会影响他们的免疫接种行为。被确定为阻止父母为孩子接种疫苗的具体因素包括对自闭症和其他发育迟缓的恐惧、对风险和副作用的担忧、对疫苗效力的不信任以及媒体的负面信息。父母的免疫接种决定显然受到政策合规性、家人和朋友以及社交网站的影响。这些因素通过社会生态模型进行解释。此外,2019冠状病毒病(COVID - 19)大流行在感知障碍、感知益处和感知信任方面影响了父母关于完成疫苗接种的决定。(4)结论:通过研究影响沙特阿拉伯东部省份父母为孩子接种疫苗决定的社会生态因素,本研究为文献做出了贡献,并为沙特国家儿童免疫接种计划提供了有关导致儿童免疫接种犹豫的因素的信息,有助于解决一个关键的医疗保健问题。