Magee Laura A, Brown Julia R, Bowyer Vicky, Horgan Gillian, Boulding Harriet, Khalil Asma, Cheetham Nathan J, Harvey Nicholas R, Mistry Hiten D, Sudre Carole, Silverio Sergio A, von Dadelszen Peter, Duncan Emma L
School of Life Course & Population Science, King's College London, London WC2R 2LS, UK.
Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology, King's College London, London SE1 7EH, UK.
Vaccines (Basel). 2024 Apr 18;12(4):440. doi: 10.3390/vaccines12040440.
COVID-19 vaccination rates are lower in women of reproductive age (WRA), including pregnant/postpartum women, despite their poorer COVID-19-related outcomes. We evaluated the vaccination experiences of 3568 U.K. WRA, including 1983 women (55.6%) experiencing a pandemic pregnancy, recruited through the ZOE COVID Symptom Study app. Two staggered online questionnaires (Oct-Dec 2021: 3453 responders; Aug-Sept 2022: 2129 responders) assessed reproductive status, COVID-19 status, vaccination, and attitudes for/against vaccination. Descriptive analyses included vaccination type(s), timing relative to age-based eligibility and reproductive status, vaccination delay (first vaccination >28 days from eligibility), and rationale, with content analysis of free-text comments. Most responders (3392/3453, 98.2%) were vaccinated by Dec 2021, motivated by altruism, vaccination supportiveness in general, low risk, and COVID-19 concerns. Few declined vaccination (by Sept/2022: 20/2129, 1.0%), citing risks (pregnancy-specific and longer-term), pre-existing immunity, and personal/philosophical reasons. Few women delayed vaccination, although pregnant/postpartum women (vs. other WRA) received vaccination later (median 3 vs. 0 days after eligibility, < 0.0001). Despite high uptake, concerns included adverse effects, misinformation (including from healthcare providers), ever-changing government advice, and complex decision making. In summary, most women in this large WRA cohort were promptly vaccinated, including pregnant/post-partum women. Altruism and community benefit superseded personal benefit as reasons for vaccination. Nevertheless, responders experienced angst and received vaccine-related misinformation and discouragement. These findings should inform vaccination strategies in WRA.
尽管育龄女性(WRA),包括孕妇/产后女性,感染新冠病毒(COVID-19)的后果更严重,但她们的COVID-19疫苗接种率较低。我们评估了3568名英国育龄女性的疫苗接种经历,其中包括1983名(55.6%)在疫情期间怀孕的女性,这些女性是通过ZOE COVID症状研究应用程序招募的。两份错开的在线问卷(2021年10月至12月:3453名受访者;2022年8月至9月:2129名受访者)评估了生殖状况、COVID-19状况、疫苗接种情况以及对疫苗接种的支持/反对态度。描述性分析包括疫苗类型、相对于基于年龄的接种资格和生殖状况的接种时间、接种延迟(首次接种距符合资格超过28天)以及理由,并对自由文本评论进行内容分析。大多数受访者(3392/3453,98.2%)在2021年12月前接种了疫苗,其动机是利他主义、总体上对疫苗接种的支持、低风险以及对COVID-19的担忧。很少有人拒绝接种(截至2022年9月:20/2129,1.0%),理由是存在风险(特定于怀孕和长期风险)、已有免疫力以及个人/哲学原因。很少有女性延迟接种疫苗,尽管孕妇/产后女性(与其他育龄女性相比)接种疫苗的时间较晚(符合资格后中位数为3天对0天,<0.0001)。尽管接种率很高,但担忧包括不良反应、错误信息(包括来自医疗保健提供者的)、不断变化的政府建议以及复杂的决策过程。总之,在这个庞大的育龄女性队列中,大多数女性,包括孕妇/产后女性,都及时接种了疫苗。利他主义和社区利益取代了个人利益成为接种疫苗的理由。然而,受访者经历了焦虑,并收到了与疫苗相关的错误信息和劝阻。这些发现应为育龄女性的疫苗接种策略提供参考。