| Literature DB >> 34920272 |
Luigi Carbone1, Raffaella Di Girolamo2, Ilenia Mappa3, Gabriele Saccone1, Antonio Raffone1, Daniele Di Mascio4, Valentino De Vivo1, Francesco D'Antonio5, Maurizio Guida1, Giuseppe Rizzo6, Giuseppe Maria Maruotti1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: SARS-CoV-2 vaccine has been recommended to pregnant women, but survey studies showed contrasting findings worldwide in relation to the willingness to accept vaccination during pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 in pregnancy; Infection during pregnancy; Prevention; SARS-CoV-2; Vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34920272 PMCID: PMC8648617 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejogrb.2021.12.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol ISSN: 0301-2115 Impact factor: 2.435
Fig. 1Flow-chart diagram of studies’ inclusion in the systematic review.
Features of included studies.
| Italy | Multicenter cross-sectional survey. | 142 (119 pregnant and 23 early post-partum period). | January 2021 | Pregnant women attending the two centers for outpatient visits, and early post-partum inpatient women who were asked to participate to a survey on the possible uptake of the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine during pregnancy and puerperium. | Inability to comprehend the text and to sign the informed consent. | After signing an informed consent and reading the position paper ad interim on “Pregnancy and COVID-19 vaccine”, an anonymous online semi-structured questionnaire developed using google forms was administered; Part A (socio-cultural and demographic variables, past and current obstetrical history, maternal age and gestational age at the receipt of the questionnaire); Part B (women’s knowledge and concerns about vaccines). | Women were specifically asked if they were in favor or against the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine during pregnancy. Furthermore, questions were asked regarding general acceptance of vaccines, whether the acceptance of | Most of the included women did not express their agreement to eventually receive SARS-CoV-2 vaccine during pregnancy (40, 28.2% vs 102, 71.8%). No statistically significant differences were found in relation to nationality, marital status, education, employment, smoke, pre-existing diseases, type of conception, pregnancy trimester at survey and pregnancy complications during current pregnancy, between women who would undergo SARS-CoV-2 vaccine in pregnancy and women who would not. Women who had a previous pregnancy (irrespectively from the outcome) and women still pregnant at survey time would preferably decline the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine in a statistically significant manner. | |
| Ireland, Norway, Switzerland, the Netherlands, United Kingdom, Belgium. | Multinational, cross-sectional, web-based survey. | 16,063 (6661 pregnant and 9402 breast- feeding women). | Between June 16 and July 14, 2020, and between April 10 and May 31, 2020. | Pregnant and breastfeeding women up to 3 months postpartum (or up to 4 weeks after delivery in Belgium) and who were older than 18 years. | NS | Data collection occurred through a uniform, anonymous web survey. Women’s perceptions about the coronavirus and COVID-19 vaccine willingness were assessed by seven statements (five in the pregnancy and two in the breastfeeding survey), rated on a 4-point Likert scale ranging from “strongly agree” to “strongly disagree”. | Pregnant and breastfeeding women’s beliefs about the coronavirus and COVID-19 vaccine willingness in pregnancy and breastfeeding (for all countries) and on the self- reported impact of the pandemic on the four thematic areas of maternity care (for all countries except Belgium). | Primigravida pregnant women and breastfeeding women who delivered in the last 6 months were more likely to be willing to get a vaccine. In contrast, pregnant and breastfeeding women with low and medium levels of education and without employment were less in favor of COVID-19 vaccination. Finally, pregnant women working in healthcare were also less likely to be willing to get a vaccine compared to women employed outside healthcare. In the univariable analyses, pregnant women who had a positive test result for SARS- CoV-2 were more in favor of getting a COVID-19 vaccine in pregnancy compared to women without a positive test result, but the finding was not significant. A similar observation was noted among breastfeeding women. | |
| USA | Cross-sectional survey | 124 | Between February and March 2021. | Pregnant women of 18 years old or older. | NS | Anonymous survey | Patients were queried about their willingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine before they were given any information. Data on demographic factors, including race, religion, education level, marital status, and prior vaccine history, were also collected. Patients were then asked to read a fact sheet about the safety of the COVID-19 vaccines in pregnant women and discussed the information with a provider. A comparison between the pre- and post- willingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine was conducted. | Those who received the annual influenza vaccine were significantly more likely to get the COVID-19 vaccine (50% vs. 9.7%). Additionally, those who had previously discussed the COVID-19 vaccine with a physician were significantly more likely to receive the vaccine (45.8% vs. 26.0%). There was a statistically significant effect of discussing the vaccine with a healthcare provider and providing patients with a fact sheet regarding patients’ willingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. | |
| Ireland | Single center cross sectional survey. | 300 | Between December 4, 2020 and January 14, 2021. | Participants were recruited both in person and via online platforms. Obstetricians and midwives distributed study information leaflets with a link to the survey to women attending for clinic appointments. A short video that explained the purpose of the research and provided a link to the survey appeared on the hospital’s Instagram and Twitter accounts. A member of the research team also recruited women in-person during OGTT. | NS | The survey instrument was developed and hosted online using Sawtooth software. Likelihood was measured on a 10-point scale where 1 represented “very unlikely” and 10 “very likely.” An open-ended question, “What do you think would most affect your choice about receiving or not receiving a COVID- 19 vaccine during pregnancy?” accompanied the scale question. Survey items included demographic information, obstetric factors, and prior vaccination experience. | Women rated their likelihood of receipt of a COVID-19 vaccine, when pregnant and when not pregnant, and their likelihood of receipt of routinely recommended vaccines in pregnancy. | 113 (38%) women rated likelihood of receipt of a COVID-19 vaccine during pregnancy as 8 or higher, while 108 (36%) respond with a score of ≤ 2. On the other hand, 63% of women rated their likelihood of receipt of a COVID-19 vaccine if not pregnant as ≥ 8 and 75% of women rated their likelihood of receipt of routine vaccines during pregnancy as ≥ 8. On bivariate analysis having a college degree, attending private or semi-private clinic, being aged 30–35 y, and gestational age > 31 weeks were associated with a score of ≥ 8. However, only later gestational age and being aged 30–35 y remained associated with increased likelihood of a COVID-19 vaccine receipt on multivariable logistic regression. | |
| Turkey | single center cross-sectional survey. | 300 | Between January 1, 2021 and February 1, 2021. | Pregnant women who were seen for prenatal care. | NS | The face-to-face questionnaire contained 40 questions about socio-demographic features, vaccination history, perception of risk related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and acceptance of and attitude toward future COVID-19 vaccination. | NS | 111 (37%) stated their intent to receive the vaccine if it were recommended for pregnant women. 92 (30.7%) of the participants were regarded as experiencing high-risk pregnancies. We did not find a significant difference between high-risk and low-risk groups. Pregnant women who said they would refuse the vaccine stated their most important concerns as: (1) a lack of data about COVID-19 vaccine safety in the pregnant population, and (2) the possibility of harm to the fetus. When we compared first-trimester with second- and third-trimester pregnant women, women in their first trimester expressed greater interest in receiving the COVID-19 vaccination than others. | |
| USA | Single center cross sectional survey. | 662 | From December 14, 2020 to January 14, 2021. | ≥18 years old and English-speaking during their nuchal translucency or anatomic survey sonogram appointment. | NS | 31 questions regarding socio-demographics, vaccination history, previous COVID-19 symptoms and diagnoses, attitudes toward vaccines in pregnancy, and beliefs about the COVID-19 vaccination specifically. | Primary outcome was COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rate. Univariate analyses were performed to estimate the effect of different variables on acceptance of COVID-19 vaccination and are reported as OR with 95% CI. To better understand certain subpopulations’ vaccine acceptance rate, we performed crosswise analyses of a priori variables of interest (race, educational attainment, and influenza vaccine status). | Overall, 381/653 (58.3%) women would accept the COVID-19 vaccine while pregnant. Among the women who declined vaccination, the most common primary concern was risk to the fetus or neonate (45.8%), followed by vaccine side effects (17.7%). On univariate analyses, younger age, Black or African American race, Hispanic ethnicity, having less than a bachelor’s degree, and declining the seasonal influenza vaccine were associated with non-acceptance of COVID-19 vaccination in pregnancy. Trust in the information received about vaccinations was the strongest predictor of COVID-19 vaccination acceptance. On crosswise comparisons, educational status did not affect COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rate among Black or African American women; however, among White women, lower education was associated with lower odds of vaccine acceptance. Additionally, among those who decline influenza vaccination in pregnancy, no Black or African American women would accept COVID-19 vaccination, while 25.0% of White women would accept the vaccine. | |
| Italy | Single center cross-sectional survey. | 161 | On December 27, 2020. | Women that have attended the antenatal clinic of Ospedale Cristo Re, Università di Roma Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy, in the last 2 weeks. | NS | Anonymous online semi-structured questionnaire was sent through emails the first day of starting SARS-CoV-2 vaccinations in Italy; the questionnaire is structured in two sections: part A, finalized to acquire in 16 items maternal characteristics and to test women’s knowledge and concerns about vaccines; part B, containing the STAI. To evaluate the maternal concern about perinatal complication induced by SARS-CoV-2 vaccine | NS | 136 (84.5%) felt vaccination as a possible breakthrough in resolving the pandemic (vaccine positive) while the remaining 25 (25.5%) considered the vaccine not useful (vaccine negative). Among the former group, 72 women (52.9%) were favorable to obtain the vaccine during pregnancy, a percentage significantly higher when compared to the vaccine negative group (7; 28%). Further, women negative to SARS-CoV-2 vaccine showed a lower educational level and a higher prevalence of unemployment when compared to the vaccine positive group. No differences were found among the other parameters tested. No differences were found between groups in basal anxiety as expressed by the presence of STAI T scale values > 40, while there was significant higher prevalence of abnormal STAI S values in the group of women negative to vaccine. | |
| Qatar | Single center cross-sectional survey. | 341 | From October 15, 2020 to November 15, 2020. | Pregnant or lactating women. | NS | Voluntary participation in the survey via an online link was made available to all the residents of Qatar via the HMC social media platforms. A composite questionnaire incorporating a validated vaccine hesitancy measurement tool called VAX was used to explore attitudes to vaccination, participants’ concerns around the vaccine and relevant background information. | Intentions to vaccinate: whether participant would accept vaccination or has degree of hesitancy. Influences determining vaccine hesitancy: | As many as a quarter of the respondents demonstrated vaccine hesitancy saying that they probably or definitely would not take it (25%) and another quarter (25.9%) remained unsure. Notably, Qatari respondents demonstrated much higher hesitancy rates at 75%. As many as 18.3% would probably or definitely not recommend the vaccine to family and 28.3% would not get their children vaccinated if a vaccine became available for them. When considering vaccination before travel, while 65.9% would consider taking the vaccine, over a third (34.1%) still remained unsure. 75% of Qatari women, 50% of Non-Qatari Arabic women, 9% of women from other Asian countries and 39% of women from Non-Asian countries would refuse a vaccine. A similar analysis found there was no significant effect of completing childhood vaccinations, chronic illness, past mental health problems, educational status or age on vaccine hesitancy. Of 154 respondents who usually accept influenza vaccination, 18 (11.7%) showed hesitancy towards COVID-19 vaccination. | |
| Ethiopia | Institutional-based cross-sectional survey. | 396 | From January 1 up to 30, 2021. | All pregnant mothers who were attending regular antenatal care follow-up at Gurage Zone public hospitals during data collection period were included. | Pregnant women who were critically ill during the study period, who had history of mental illness and hearing impairment, which were unable to provide the required information by themself. | The questionnaire contains: socio-demographic characteristic of the study respondents, knowledge, attitude, practice of the study respondents on COVID-19 preventive measures, and intention of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among pregnant women. | COVID-19 vaccine acceptance: “Will you get vaccinated if you get COVID-19 vaccine?” those who respond “Yes” for this question were considered as vaccine acceptance and those pregnant women who respond “No” were considered as vaccine hesitancy. The respondents’ level of knowledge about COVID-19 was reported as good knowledge if the study participant correctly responded to more than or equal to 80% of knowledge assessment tools, and poor for < 80%. | The COVID-19 vaccine acceptance if it is available was found to be 70.7%. The reasons for refusal of accepting COVID-19 vaccine were due to fear of side effect, 54 (13.6%), the vaccine might be ineffective, 24 (6.1%), I used other methods of COVID-19 prevention, 20 (5.1%), the vaccine might turn into COVID-19, 15 (3.8%) and the vaccine might affect my fetuses, 3 (0.8%). The multivariate analysis showed that maternal age (34–41 years), maternal primary educational status, good knowledge, and good practice of pregnant women towards COVID-19 and its preventive measures were significantly associated with acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccine. | |
| 16 countries (USA, India, Brazil, Russia, Spain, Argentina, Colombia, UK, Peru, Mexico, South Africa, Italy, Chile, the Philippines, Australia and New Zealand). | Multicenter cross-sectional survey. | 5294 | Between October 28 and November 18, 2020. | Women aged 18 years or older, currently pregnant or with at least one child under 18 years of age. | NS | Anonymous online survey, containing 63 questions divided into five sections, assessing COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and confidence, negative experiences with COVID-19, perception on the risk of COVID-19, public trust, general vaccine attitude, as well as demographics and socioeconomic status. Responses to multiple-choice questions measured agreement with 5- or 7-point Likert scales. Participants were allowed to skip any questions or withdraw from the survey at any time without penalty. No follow-up was conducted. | Covid-19 vaccine acceptance; attitudes towards vaccines; top reasons for COVID‐19 vaccine reluctance; predictors of COVID‐19 vaccine acceptance. | Among pregnant women, 52.0% (n = 2747) intended to receive COVID-19 vaccination during their pregnancy if an efficacy of 90% were achieved. Responses among pregnant women varied substantially by country (range: 28.8–84.4%). COVID-19 vaccine acceptance level was above 80% for pregnant women in Mexico and India; and below 45% for USA, Australia and Russia. Among non-pregnant women, 73.4% (n = 9214/12,562) intended to receive vaccination. | |
| Switzerland | Part of the multicenter cross-sectional survey by Ceulemans et al. 2021.50 | 1551 (515 pregnant and 1036 breastfeeding women). | From June 18 to July 12, 2020. | Women needed to be at least 18 years old and be pregnant at the time of the survey or have breastfed within the past three months. | NS | Data collection occurred through a uniform, anonymous web survey. Women’s perceptions about the coronavirus and COVID-19 vaccine willingness were assessed by seven statements (five in the pregnancy and two in the breastfeeding survey), rated on a 4-point Likert scale ranging from “strongly agree” to “strongly disagree”. Information on vaccination practices was obtained through a dichotomic question on vaccination against influenza within the past year (yes or no) and multi-choice questions assessing their opinion on influenza vaccine usefulness during pregnancy and breastfeeding, the fear of maternal and fetal/neonatal side effects, and overall vaccination acceptance. | COVID-19 vaccine willingness of pregnant and breastfeeding women if a vaccine had been available. Information on sociodemographic characteristics (i.e., age, primary language, marital status, working status, education level), medical history (i.e., gravidity, parity, co-morbidities, smoking during pregnancy, main practitioner for the pregnancy follow-up, clinical course of the neonate for breastfeeding mothers), exposure to SARS- CoV-2 or presence in an at-risk setting (i.e., symptoms potentially related to COVID-19, hospitalization related to COVID-19, testing by RT-PCR, serology or computed tomography, living with someone who tested positive, co-habiting with an elderly person (>65 years old)). | Only 29.7% (153/515) of pregnant and 38.6% (400/1036) of breastfeeding women were willing to get vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 if a vaccine had been available during the first wave. More specifically, 8.1% (127/1551) fully agreed, 27.5% (426/1551) somewhat agreed, 40.4% (626/1551) somewhat disagreed, and 24% (372/1551) fully disagreed. Potential predictors of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine acceptance. Sociodemographic factors such as a maternal age above 40 years old, an | |
| USA | Single center cross-sectional survey. | 338 (216 pregnant and 122 breastfeeding women). | From January 7, 2021 to January 29, 2021. | Respondents were conveniently recruited through three primary sources with no restrictions to participation except that respondents were to be of the female sex. | NS | An anonymous web-based survey was created in RedCap©, a secure web-based application designed to support data capture for research studies, and a URL link created for respondents to complete the survey. | Respondents were asked their age, pregnancy status, breastfeeding status, race, ethnicity, chronic medical conditions, employment and their health care provider. On our 9th multiple choice question respondents were asked if they planned on taking the vaccine once it was available to them. Respondents who responded “yes” or “I have already been vaccinated” were classified under vaccine acceptance. The remainder of their survey inquired about factors associated with vaccine acceptance. Those who responded “no” were classified under vaccine declination and the remainder of their survey focused on factors associated with declination. Those who responded “unsure” were classified as undecided and answered all questions associated with vaccine acceptance and declination. All respondents were then queried on factors that would influence their decision to accept and decline the COVID-19 vaccine. Factors against vaccination included concerns of its effect on pregnancy, suffering side effects, permanent injury, infertility, and risk of infection with COVID-19 from the vaccine. Factors in favor or vaccination included fear of severe COVID-19 infection, fear of infecting others with COVID-19, current available data from vaccine trials, healthcare workers acceptance of vaccination, current employment in healthcare and fear of suffering severe illness due to their race and or ethnicity. | Breastfeeding respondents were the second most likely to accept vaccination with an overall acceptance rate of 55.2%, with 60 (49.2%) reporting plan to take the vaccine and 4 (3.3%) reporting already have received the vaccine. Pregnant respondents had the lowest percentage of responses indicating vaccine acceptance with an overall rate of 44.3%, with only 82 (38.0%) respondents planning to be vaccinated and 4 (1.9%) respondents who were already vaccinated. Additionally, pregnant respondents had the highest percentage responses indicating vaccine declination with 59 (27.3%) stating they did not plan on getting the vaccine. Breastfeeding respondents were the most likely to report indecision towards vaccination with 32 (26.2%) stating that they were “not sure” if they would accept or decline the vaccine compared to 49 (22.7%) of pregnant respondents and 91 (13.9%) of non-pregnant respondents. | |
| China | Multi-center hospital-based cross-sectional survey. | 1392 | From November 13 to 27, 2020 | 1) women aged 18 years or above; 2) pregnant women who attended antenatal clinics in the participating obstetric hospitals during 13 November 2020 to 27 November 2020; 3) voluntary agreement to participant in the present study. | NS | In the present study, knowledge toward COVID-19 infection consisted of 17 items, including source of infection, route of transmission, susceptible population, common symptoms, high-risk population for severe illness and death, individual preventive measures for COVID-19 infection. There were three possible responses (yes, no, or not sure). For each item, if correct answer was chosen, the respondent received 1 score. Wrong answer or responses “unknow” received zero score. The sum of the scores for all the 17 items was calculated as the total knowledge score on COVID-19, which ranged from 0 to 17. The higher the score, the more knowledge participants got. The total knowledge score was divided into three groups (low, moderate, high) by tertiles. | The primary outcome is the acceptance of a potential COVID-19 vaccine. The acceptance of a potential COVID-19 vaccine was collected by the question “If a vaccine for the COVID-19 infection becomes available, will you get vaccinated during pregnancy? (yes, no or not sure)”. Pregnant women who responded “no or not sure” were then asked the reasons for vaccine hesitation by the question “What makes you unwilling (or unsure) to get the vaccine?”. Acceptable price for the COVID-19 vaccine was also collected among all participants by the question “How much do you think the price of the COVID-19 vaccine is acceptable? (cost of whole stage of vaccination)” followed by the response options “only acceptable for free”, “<200 RMB”, “201–400 RMB”, ”401–600 RMB”, and “>600 RMB”. To further assess the factors related to the attitude toward COVID-19 vaccine, we developed several questions based on the health belief model. The health belief model included five dimensions that might influence individuals’ health behaviors, namely perceptions of susceptibility, severity, barriers, benefits and cues to action. In the present study, there were totally 12 items focused on factors related to the attitude toward COVID-19 vaccine, including perceived susceptibility to COVID-19 infection for mother and infant (2 items), perceived severity of COVID-19 infection for mother and infant (2 items), perceived barriers of COVID-19 vaccination (3 items), benefits of COVID-19 vaccination (3 items) and cues to action (2 items). The response answers of “very concerned or agree”, “moderate concerned or not sure”, “not concerned or disagree” was recorded as 3, 2, and 1 score, respectively. The summed scores for each dimension of the health belief model framework were calculated accordingly. The participants were divided into three groups (low, moderate, high) by tertiles according to the summed score for each HBM dimension. | The proportion of acceptance of a COVID-19 vaccine were 77.4% among all participants. The acceptance rates decreased significantly along with the increasing age, from 81.7% in women aged 25 years or below to 66.7% in women aged above 40 years. Pregnant women with younger age, lower education, living in western region, second and third gestational trimester, with gestational complications, and higher knowledge score on COVID-19 infection were more likely to accept COVID-19 vaccination. The acceptance rates of a COVID-19 vaccine were significantly increased with the increasing total knowledge score on COVID-19 infection by locally weighted scatterplot smoothing regression analysis. Nearly one quarter (24.4%) of all participants only accept the COVID-19 vaccination for free. There were totally 80.4% of pregnant women who responded that the acceptable price of the COVID-19 vaccine (cost for the whole stage of vaccination) was < 200 RMB. Pregnant women who were concerned about getting COVID-19 were more likely to accept COVID-19 vaccination (79.0%) than those not concerned. Pregnant women who agreed with the benefit of vaccination to her fetus and baby had higher level of acceptance (78.7%) than those not agreed. Pregnant women perceived cues to action (receiving vaccine recommendation from doctors) were more likely to accept COVID-19 vaccine (80.6%) than those not perceived (33.3%). The acceptance rates of a COVID-19 vaccine were significantly higher in pregnant women with high level of perceived susceptibility to COVID-19 infection, severity of COVID-19 infection, benefits of COVID-19 vaccination, and cues to action than those with low level, while it was significantly lower in pregnant women with higher level of perceived barriers of vaccination (50.8% vs 91.3%). In the multivariable regression model, the acceptance of a COVID-19 vaccine was associated with young age, western region, low level of education, late pregnancy, high knowledge score on COVID-19, high level of perceived susceptibility, low level of perceived barriers, high level of perceived benefit, and high level of perceived cues to action. Among the 315 (22.6%) pregnant women with vaccine hesitancy, 54% of them refuse any vaccination during pregnancy due to their worry on any side effect. 47.0% of them concerned about the safety and 44.1% concerned about the efficacy of the COVID-19 vaccine on pregnant women and unborn baby. | |
| Ethiopia | A facility-based cross-sectional survey. | 412 | From February 1 to March 1, 2021. | Pregnant women within the age group > 18 and residing for > 6 months in the area. | Pregnant women who were unable to respond due to illness or other physical impairment. | Interviewer-administered structured tool was used to collect the data. The tool has six sections: sociodemographic characteristics, clinical and reproductive features, knowledge of the COVID-19 vaccine, perception toward COVID-19 vaccine, compliance with COVID-19 guidelines, intention to vaccinate against COVID-19. | Knowledge of the COVID-19 vaccine was measured by five items, and it was analyzed as a binary variable. Participants who had correctly answered three and more questions were designated as having “Good knowledge,” otherwise “Poor knowledge.” The items were as follows: “have you heard vaccine for COVID-19?” “The vaccine doesn’t interfere with the pregnancy,” “the vaccine can decrease the risk of COVID-19 transmission,” “the vaccine can severely affect my health condition,” and “the vaccine can cure already affected people.” | About half (211; 51.2%) of the participants prefer for natural immunity rather than COVID-19 vaccine, and more than half (229; 55.6%) of the participants had a mistrust of vaccine benefit. Overall, 217 (52.6%) of the participants had a positive perception to the COVID-19 vaccine. Only 31.3% of the participants had an intention to take the COVID-19 vaccine when available. From the total seven candidate variables entered into multivariable analysis, four variables—namely, residence, education level, compliance to COVID-19 guidelines, and perception toward COVID-19 vaccine—were found to be independently associated with intention to take the COVID-19 vaccine. The OR of intention to take COVID-19 vaccine were nearly 2.6 times higher among women who live in urban residences. Women with secondary and higher education were four times more likely intended to take the COVID-19 vaccine than women with no formal education. Compared with those women who had not made compliance with the COVID-19 guidelines, women who had made compliance with the COVID-19 guidelines were nearly six times more likely to have an intention for COVID-19 vaccination. Moreover, women who had good knowledge were three times more likely to have an intention for COVID-19 vaccination than those who had poor knowledge. | |
| Vietnam | Cross-sectional survey | 651 | From January to February 2021 | (1) aged over 18 years; (2) being pregnant or had just given birth; (3) providing written informed consent to participate. | Women who suffered from serious illnesses or could not answer the questionnaire (for instance, inability to read/write or having a cognitive impairment which might influence the ability for responding to questions). | An online questionnaire on SurveyMonkey’s platform was designed. The survey link was sent to participants by the research team, and the participants answered the questionnaire via their smartphones or tablets. The researchers stayed in the same room with participants to answer their questions or clarify unclear terminology. The survey had four components: 1) socio- demographic information; 2) maternal characteristics; 3) affected by COVID-19 pandemic; 4) willingness to receive and pay for COVID-19 vaccine. Demographic information, maternal features and effect of COVID-19 epidemic during antenatal care were also collected. | The primary outcomes were the acceptance to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, willingness to pay for the vaccine and the amount of money participants were willing to pay (“amount of WTP”). To measure the outcomes, we asked them the following questions: “Do you want to get a COVID-19 vaccine?” and “Are you willing to pay for a COVID-19 vaccine for yourself and your household members?”. We asked this question because pregnant women might perceive that they were not eligible for the vaccination but they were willing to pay for other family members to be vaccinated. Those who answered “No” were asked to provide their reasons. Meanwhile, pregnant women answering “Yes” were then asked the amount of money they would be willing to pay for the COVID vaccination by asking “How much do you want to pay for a COVID vaccination?”. | Significant differences in willingness to receive COVID-19 vaccine were observed between respondents in Hanoi and Ca Mau, whereby 67.8% of women in Hanoi were willing to get the vaccine, whereas in Ca Mau only 39.9%. The majority of respondents were willing to pay for the COVID-19 vaccine with a mean amount of WTP of USD 15.2; however, there were notable differences in WTP for the vaccine between Hanoi and Ca Mau. <35% and 50% of participants were willing to pay 15.2 USD and 4.5 USD for the vaccine, respectively. Regarding acceptance, pregnant women living in rural/mountainous areas (48.4%), those with high school education or below (51.6%), and those with private health insurance (31.5%) were more likely to refuse vaccination. White-collar workers were more likely to accept to be immunized (67.1%) and pay for the vaccine (87.3%) than other groups. Pregnant women living with husband and children were less likely to be willing to pay (92.2%) for the vaccine. Those willing to be vaccinated and pay for it had significantly higher monthly household income than those not willing be vaccinated and to pay. |
GDM, gestational diabetes mellitus; NS, Not specified; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance testing; PIH, pregnancy induced hypertension; PTL, preterm labor; USA, United States of America;
DTPa, Diphtheria, Tetanus, acellular Pertussis; OR, Odds Ratio; STAI, State–Trait Anxiety inventory; HMC, Hamad Medical Corporation; AUC, area under the curve; RT-PCR, real time polymerase chain reaction; URL, Uniform Resource Locator; RMB, Renminbi; HBM, health belief model; USD, USA dollar; WTP, willingness to pay.
Quality assessment of included studies.
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 7/9 | 2/3 | 14/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 6/9 | 2/3 | 13/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 1/3 | 8/9 | 2/3 | 14/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 1/3 | 6/9 | 2/3 | 13/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 3/3 | 7/9 | 2/3 | 15/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 3/3 | 7/9 | 2/3 | 15/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 7/9 | 2/3 | 14/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 7/9 | 2/3 | 14/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 3/3 | 8/9 | 2/3 | 16/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 1/3 | 5/9 | 1/3 | 10/18 | Q | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 8/9 | 2/3 | 15/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 6/9 | 2/3 | 13/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 7/9 | 2/3 | 14/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 6/9 | 2/3 | 13/18 | A | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 5/9 | 2/3 | 12/18 | Q | |
A, acceptable quality; Q, questionable quality.
Pooled proportions (95% CI) for the main outcomes observed in the present systematic review.
| Vaccine acceptance | 14 | 15809/25839 | 50.0 (43.4–56.7) | 98.7 |
| Vaccine acceptance | 13 | 9403/16404 | 49.1 (42.3–56.0) | 98.4 |
| Vaccine acceptance | 3 | 6251/9119 | 61.6 (50.0–70.5) | 81.2 |
Fig. 2Forest plot for the worldwide acceptance rate of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine among pregnant and breastfeeding women.
Fig. 3Forest plot for the acceptance rate of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine among pregnant women only.
Fig. 4Forest plot for the acceptance rate of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine among breastfeeding women only.
Pooled Odds Ratios (OR) for the different categorical outcomes explored in the present systematic review about women accepting SARS-CoV-2 vaccine compared to those who refused or were unsecure.
| Outcome | Studies | Pregnancies | Pooled OR (95% CI) | I2 (%) | p-value (P < 0.05) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advanced maternal age (>35 years) | 7 | 967/5040 vs 874/4692 | 1.02 (0.8–1.3) | 69.4 | 0.84 |
| Caucasian | 3 | 412/534 vs 408/561 | 1.93 (1.0–3.5) | 32 | 0.03 |
| Unmarried | 3 | 1057/3180 vs 814/2895 | 1.33 (0.6–2.8) | 92.1 | 0.46 |
| Medium-high | 9 | 4703/5713 vs 3727/5066 | 1.60 (0.9–2.6) | 93.2 | 0.07 |
| Employed | 6 | 1869/2724 vs 1396/2061 | 1.15 (0.8–1.5) | 72.7 | 0.31 |
| Pre-existing disease | 5 | 256/2343 vs 202/1789 | 1.22 (0.9–1.5) | 3.0 | 0.08 |
| Vaccinated for influenza | 6 | 838/2312 vs 580/2150 | 5.18 (2.6–10.1) | 85.6 | < 0.001 |
| Nulliparous | 7 | 2454/5031 vs 1698/3785 | 1.01 (0.8–1.3) | 77.1 | 0.90 |
| Complication in pregnancy | 3 | 374/1510 vs 133/675 | 1.24 (0.8–1.8) | 55.8 | 0.29 |
| 1st trimester | 3 | 295/1670 vs 198/1415 | 0.75 (0.3–1.4) | 80.5 | 0.40 |
| 2nd trimester | 3 | 363/1670 vs 247/1415 | 0.85 (0.4–1.6) | 85.2 | 0.62 |
| 3rd trimester | 3 | 599/1670 vs 323/1415 | 0.85 (0.4–1.8) | 91.5 | 0.68 |