Phiri Mackwellings Maganizo, Osman Rahma, Weldegebriel Shewit, Sabola Steven, Ongadi Beatrice, Beavis Catherine, Mwendera Chikondi, Nyirenda Deborah
Department of Microbiology, Kamuzu University of Health Sciences, Blantyre, Malawi.
Department of Social Science, Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Clinical Programme, Blantyre, Malawi.
PLoS One. 2025 Sep 9;20(9):e0319691. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319691. eCollection 2025.
Diarrhoea due to rotavirus remains a significant cause of child mortality in developing regions. Caregivers' perspectives on the social determinants of gastroenteritis and childhood vaccination, including the rotavirus vaccine, were explored through focus group discussions in Ethiopia (n = 6), Kenya (n = 14), and Malawi (n = 10), using a combination of thematic and framework analysis approaches. The results show that diarrhoea was perceived to be a burden in all three countries, particularly among infants, due to challenges in WASH (water, sanitation, and hygiene) infrastructures and poverty. Prevention strategies mentioned by the caregivers focussed on enhancing WASH interventions without mention of vaccination. Participants however expressed a lack of agency to address WASH at community level in informal settlements where the studies were conducted. Antibiotics were seen as "strong medications" and often purchased without prescription for treatment of diarrhoea, raising concerns on Anti-Microbial Resistance (AMR), while home remedies such as rice porridge were used for less severe diarrhoea symptoms. Perceived or experiential benefits and safety of previous vaccines promoted vaccine uptake in all three countries. On the other hand, limited understanding of vaccines, concerns about side effects, perceived excessive vaccination, mistrust of vaccines or suspicions of existing vaccines undermined individuals' willingness to vaccinate children. Our results highlight that a lack of attention to socio-determinants of poor health in contexts where there are several vaccines and yet a high incidence of vaccine-preventable diseases may undermine vaccine confidence. Multi-sectoral interventions to tackle social determinants of diarrhoea and improve community understanding of vaccines are required to improve overall community health outcomes.
在发展中地区,轮状病毒引起的腹泻仍然是儿童死亡的一个重要原因。通过在埃塞俄比亚(n = 6)、肯尼亚(n = 14)和马拉维(n = 10)进行焦点小组讨论,采用主题分析和框架分析相结合的方法,探讨了照顾者对肠胃炎和儿童疫苗接种(包括轮状病毒疫苗)的社会决定因素的看法。结果表明,由于水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)基础设施方面的挑战以及贫困,腹泻在这三个国家都被视为一种负担,尤其是在婴儿中。照顾者提到的预防策略侧重于加强WASH干预措施,而未提及疫苗接种。然而,参与者表示在开展研究的非正式定居点的社区层面缺乏解决WASH问题的能力。抗生素被视为“强效药物”,经常在没有处方的情况下购买用于治疗腹泻,这引发了对抗生素耐药性(AMR)的担忧,而米粥等家庭疗法则用于症状较轻的腹泻。在所有三个国家,对先前疫苗的感知或体验到的益处和安全性促进了疫苗接种。另一方面,对疫苗的了解有限、对副作用的担忧、认为疫苗接种过多、对疫苗的不信任或对现有疫苗的怀疑削弱了个人为儿童接种疫苗的意愿。我们的结果强调,在有多种疫苗但疫苗可预防疾病发病率仍然很高的情况下,对健康状况不佳的社会决定因素缺乏关注可能会破坏疫苗信心。需要采取多部门干预措施来解决腹泻的社会决定因素,并提高社区对疫苗的了解,以改善社区的整体健康状况。