| Literature DB >> 35632560 |
Muhammad Mainuddin Patwary1,2, Mondira Bardhan1,2, Md Zahidul Haque1,2, Rabeya Sultana2, Md Ashraful Alam3,4, Matthew H E M Browning5.
Abstract
Healthcare students are clinicians-in-training likely to come into contact with COVID-19 as much as other frontline healthcare professionals. It is therefore necessary to prioritize vaccinations for this group. We conducted a global systematic assessment of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rates and related factors among healthcare students using the PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases and keyword searches in March of 2022. We found 1779 articles with relevant information and 31 articles that matched our inclusion criteria. We performed a random-effects meta-analysis and quality assessment using the eight-item Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal test for cross-sectional studies. A total of 30,272 individuals from 16 countries were studied. Most of the studies were carried out in the U.S. (n = 6), China (n = 5), Poland (n = 5), India (n = 2), Italy (n = 2), and Israel (n = 2). The prevalence of the COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rate was 68.8% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 60.8-76.3, I2 = 100%), and the prevalence of the vaccine hesitancy rate was 25.8% (95% CI: 18.5-33.8, I2 = 99%). In country-specific analyses, Romania showed the highest acceptance rate (88.0%, 95% CI: 44.5-100%), while Iraq showed the lowest acceptance rate (66.2%, 95% CI: 35.5-90.8%). In time-trend analyses, we found that acceptance rates among healthcare students decreased over time. Students concerned about potentially serious side effects of the vaccine were less willing to accept the vaccine. National and international interventions should be adopted to reduce COVID-19 vaccination hesitancy rates among these important frontline workers.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; frontline workers; healthcare students; meta-analysis; vaccine; vaccine acceptance; vaccine hesitancy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35632560 PMCID: PMC9143226 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10050806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process.
Characteristics of included studies.
| SL | Author | Study Country | Type of Healthcare | Study Design | Survey Method | Survey Period | Sampling Method | Sample Size, | Gender, Female (%) | Vaccine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Al Janabi et al. [ | USA | Osteopathic medical | Cross-sectional | Online | October 2020 | NR | 197 | 57.9 | 45 |
| 2 | Bălan et al. [ | Romania | General Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy and Nursing and Midwifery | Cross-sectional | Online | 12 January until 3 March 2021 | NR | 1581 | 74.5 | 88 |
| 3 | Belingheri et al. [ | Italy | Nursing | Cross-sectional | Online | 21–27 December 2020 | NR | 422 | 82.9 | 80.9 |
| 4 | Bolatov et al. [ | Kazakhstan | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | March 2021 | NR | 888 | 76.5 | 22.4 |
| 5 | De Sousa Chaves et al. [ | Brazil | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 18 December 2020 to 8 January 2021 | Snowball sampling | 250 | 58.5 | 84 |
| 6 | Gao et al. [ | China | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | February–March 2021 | Convenience sampling | 612 | 63.2 | NR |
| 7 | Gotlib et al. [ | Poland | Nursing undergraduate students | Cross-sectional | Online | March–April 2021 | NR | 793 | 90.8 | 38 |
| 8 | Grochowska et al. [ | Poland | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online/Off line | 4 September–5 November 2020 | NR | 419 | 70.7 | |
| 9 | Jain et al. [ | India | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 2 February–7 March 2021 | Respondent-driven sampling strategy | 1068 | 48.6 | 89.4 |
| 10 | Jiang et al. [ | China | Nursing | Cross-sectional | Online | February–April 2021 | Convenience | 1488 | 84.27 | 1256 |
| 11 | Kanyike et al. [ | Uganda | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 15–21 March 2021 | Convenience | 600 | 37.2 | 224 |
| 12 | Katz et al. [ | Israel | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | December 2020 | NR | 104 | 61.5 | 91.35 |
| 13 | Kelekar et al. [ | USA | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | November–December 2019 | NR | 167 | NR | 126 |
| Dental | 248 | 135 | ||||||||
| 14 | L. Jain et al. [ | India | Healthcare student | Cross-sectional | Online | November 2020–January 2021 | Snowball sampling | 655 | 61.98 | 63.82 |
| 15 | Li et al. [ | China | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 15 March–30 March 2021 | NR | 2196 | 81.7 | 1291 |
| 16 | Lindner-Pawłowicz et al. [ | Poland | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 8–31 December 2020 | NR | 350 | NR | 76.9 |
| 17 | Lucia et al. [ | USA | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | NR | NR | 167 | 57 | 126 |
| 18 | Lo Moro et al. [ | Italy | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 20 November 2020–2 February 2021 | NR | 838 | 63.5 | 93.3 |
| 19 | Mahdi [ | Iraq | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 2021 | NR | 810 | 60.2 | 33.83 |
| 20 | Manning et al. [ | USA | Nursing | Cross-sectional | Online | 10 August–14 September 2020 | NR | 1029 | 87.7 | 466 |
| 21 | Mascarenhas et al. [ | USA | Dental | Cross-sectional | Online | 2020 | NR | 248 | 58 | 136 |
| 22 | Mayan et al. [ | USA | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 9 February–15 March 2021 | NR | 1899 | 64.3 | 93.31 |
| 23 | Mose et al. [ | Ethiopia | Medical and health science | Cross-sectional | NR | 1–30 March 2021 | Simple random sampling | 420 | 41.7 | 58.8 |
| 24 | Petravic et al. [ | Slovenia | Medical & Healthcare students | Cross-sectional | Online | December 2020 | NR | 624 | 79.49 | Medical: 82, Healthcare: 51 |
| 25 | Riad et al. [ | 22 countries | Dental | Cross-sectional | Online | 6–28 February 2021 | NR | 6639 | 70.5 | 63.6 |
| 26 | Rosental and Shmueli [ | Israel | Medical and nursing | Cross-sectional | Online | 27 August–28 September 2020 | NR | 628 | 66.6 | Medical: 282Nursing: 234 |
| 27 | Saied et al. [ | Egypt | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 8–15 January 2021 | Convenience sampling | 2133 | NR | 34.9 |
| 28 | Szmyd et al. [ | Poland | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | 22–25 December 2020 | NR | 687 | 64.77 | 632 |
| 29 | Talarek et al. [ | Poland | Medical | Cross-sectional | Online | March and April 2020 | NR | 411 | 68.4 | 94.6 |
| 30 | Zhang et al. [ | China | Healthcare students | Cross-sectional | Online | 16–20 August 2021 | NR | 631 | 79.71 | 77.81 |
| 31 | Zhou et al. [ | China | Nursing | Cross-sectional | Online | 4–20 January 2021 | NR | 1070 | 82.1 | 51.9 |
Notes: NR, Not Reported.
Figure 2COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rates among healthcare students by study.
Figure 3COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy rates among healthcare students by study.
Figure 4Map of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rates among healthcare students by country.
Figure 5COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rates among healthcare students by country.
Figure 6COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy rates among healthcare students by country.
Figure 7COVID-19 vaccine acceptance rates among healthcare students by year.
Figure 8Predictors of COVID-19 vaccination acceptance among healthcare students.