| Literature DB >> 28249006 |
Melanie Marti1, Monica de Cola1, Noni E MacDonald2, Laure Dumolard1, Philippe Duclos1.
Abstract
Vaccine hesitancy has become the focus of growing attention and concern globally despite overwhelming evidence of the value of vaccines in preventing disease and saving the lives of millions of individuals every year. Measuring vaccine hesitancy and its determinants worldwide is important in order to understand the scope of the problem and for the development of evidence-based targeted strategies to reduce hesitancy. Two indicators to assess vaccine hesitancy were developed to capture its nature and scope at the national and subnational level to collect data in 2014: 1) The top 3 reasons for not accepting vaccines according to the national schedule in the past year and whether the response was opinion- or assessment-based and 2) Whether an assessment (or measurement) of the level of confidence in vaccination had taken place at national or subnational level in the previous 5 years. The most frequently cited reasons for vaccine hesitancy globally related to (1) the risk-benefit of vaccines, (2) knowledge and awareness issues, (3) religious, cultural, gender or socio-economic factors. Major issues were fear of side effects, distrust in vaccination and lack of information on immunization or immunization services. The analysis revealed that 29% of all countries had done an assessment of the level of confidence in their country, suggesting that vaccine confidence was an issue of importance. Monitoring vaccine hesitancy is critical because of its influence on the success of immunization programs. To our knowledge, the proposed indicators provide the first global snapshot of reasons driving vaccine hesitancy and depicting its widespread nature, as well as the extent of assessments conducted by countries.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28249006 PMCID: PMC5332020 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Indicators of vaccine hesitancy included in the 2014 JRF.
Fig 2Matrix of determinants of vaccine hesitancy.
Contextual influences.
Fig 4Matrix of determinants of vaccine hesitancy.
Vaccine and vaccination-specific issues.
Number and percentage of countries that responded to the question on the top three reasons for vaccine hesitancy in 2014.
| ALL REGIONSn (%) | AFR n (%) | AMR n (%) | EMR n (%) | EUR n (%) | SEAR n (%) | WPR n (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Member States providing at least one reason | 141 (73%) | 34 (72%) | 27 (77%) | 15 (71%) | 36 (70%) | 11 (100%) | 18 (67%) |
| Member States providing no reason | 53 (27%) | 13 (28%) | 8 (23%) | 6 (29%) | 17 (39%) | 0 (0%) | 9 (33%) |
| Total Member States | 194 | 47 | 35 | 21 | 53 | 11 | 27 |
Fig 5Frequency of main themes indicated as top three reasons for vaccine hesitancy within all WHO regions.
Fig 6Top three reasons for vaccine hesitancy by region.
Fig 7Top three reasons of vaccine hesitancy by level of income globally.