| Literature DB >> 35978401 |
Gbadebo Collins Adeyanju1,2,3, Cornelia Betsch4,5,6, Abdu A Adamu7,8, Khadijah Sanusi Gumbi9, Michael G Head10, Aristide Aplogan11, Haoua Tall11, Tene-Alima Essoh11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The contribution of vaccination to global public health and community wellbeing has been described as one of the greatest success stories of modern medicine. However, 13.5 million children still miss at least one of their routine vaccinations, and this contributes to about 1.5 million deaths from vaccine-preventable diseases. One of the contributing factors has been associated with vaccine hesitancy. Vaccine hesitancy is the delay or refusal of vaccines despite their availability. The study explored factors from multiple perspectives that influence hesitancy among caregivers of children and adolescent girls eligible for childhood routine immunisation and the Human Papillomavirus vaccine in Malawi.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Childhood; HPV; Malawi; Routine immunisation; Vaccination; Vaccine hesitancy; Vaccine uptake
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35978401 PMCID: PMC9385415 DOI: 10.1186/s41256-022-00261-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Res Policy ISSN: 2397-0642
Fig. 1Map of study locations in Malawi
Composition of study participants
| Method | Central level | Low/high coverage districts | Urban/rural HPV demonstration districts |
|---|---|---|---|
| KII | National EPI manager | District EPI officers | District EPI officers |
| EPI social mobilisation | one community leader (CL) each | One community leader (CL) each | |
| One member of national immunization technical advisory group (NITAG) | one community HCW each | One community HCW each | |
| United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) representative | EPI logistician | One representative each of religious leaders/groups (RL) or civil society organisations (CSO) | |
| WHO representative | One representative each of religious leaders/groups (RL) or civil society organisations (CSO) | One teacher each from a school where an hpv demonstration project was conducted | |
| FGD | One community leader (CL) each | ||
| One community HCW each | |||
| One representative each of religious leaders/groups (RL) | |||
| One representative each of civil society organisations (CSO) | |||
| One teacher each from a school where an HPV demonstration project was conducted | |||
| One caregiver each whose daughter was eligible for HPV vaccination (1) | |||
| One caregiver each whose child was eligible for Routine Immunisation (2) | |||
Fig. 2Results summary based on WHO SAGE vaccine hesitancy determinant model. HPV Human papillomavirus
Fig. 3Overview of identified drivers of vaccine hesitancy in Malawi for RI (left), HPV vaccination (right), and both (middle). The data are from both KII and FGD. RI Routine Immunisation, HPV human papillomavirus