| Literature DB >> 36127122 |
Brynne Gilmore1, Nina Gerlach2, Claudia Abreu Lopes3, Alpha A Diallo4,5, Sanghita Bhattacharyya6,7, Vergil de Claro8,9, Rawlance Ndejjo10, Elizabeth Nyamupachitu Mago11, Adalbert Tchetchia7,12.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Widespread vaccination against COVID-19 is one of the most effective ways to control, and ideally, end the global COVID-19 pandemic. Vaccine hesitancy and vaccine rates vary widely across countries and populations and are influenced by complex sociocultural, political, economic and psychological factors. Community engagement is an integral strategy within immunisation campaigns and has been shown to improve vaccine acceptance. As evidence on community engagement to support COVID-19 vaccine uptake is emerging and constantly changing, research that lessens the knowledge-to-practice gap by providing regular and up-to-date evidence on current best-practice is essential. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: A living systematic review will be conducted which includes an initial systematic review and bimonthly review updates. Searching and screening for the review and subsequent updates will be done in four streams: a systematic search of six databases, grey literature review, preprint review and citizen sourcing. The screening will be done by a minimum of two reviewers at title/abstract and full-text in Covidence, a systematic review management software. Data will be extracted across predefined fields in an excel spreadsheet that includes information about article characteristics, context and population, community engagement approaches, and outcomes. Synthesis will occur using the convergent integrated approach. We will explore the potential to quantitatively synthesise primary outcomes depending on heterogeneity of the studies. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The initial review and subsequent bimonthly searches and their results will be disseminated transparently via open-access methods. Quarterly briefs will be shared on the reviews' social media platforms and across other interested networks and repositories. A dedicated web link will be created on the Community Health-Community of Practice site for sharing findings and obtaining feedback. A mailing list will be developed and interested parties can subscribe for updates. PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER: CRD42022301996. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; International health services; PUBLIC HEALTH
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36127122 PMCID: PMC9490295 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-063057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Topic | Inclusion | Exclusion |
| Population—vaccine eligible | Any individual, regardless of age, eligible for COVID-19 vaccines. | Individuals receiving vaccines as part of clinical trials. |
| Exposure—community engagement | Community engagement activity to support vaccine uptake and/or reduce hesitancy. | Not community engagement or community engagement focus not to increase vaccination acceptance or uptake. |
| What is community engagement in this review: An approach that involves inclusion and participation of individuals, groups or structures within the parameter of a social boundary or catchment area (‘the community’) to influence a health outcome or behaviour, or to support community decision-making, planning, design, governance and delivery of service (modified definition from Barker | ||
| Outcomes | Articles will be included if they address the primary and/or secondary outcomes below: Vaccination uptake Vaccine acceptability/intention to vaccinate Vaccine hesitancy Implementation considerations for using community engagement for vaccines Insights into how community engagement can support vaccines Knowledge and awareness about vaccines Attitudes towards COVID-19 vaccines | Reports community engagement used but not enough information to extract insight |
| Location | Worldwide | No restrictions |
| Timeframe | 1 January 2020 to present | Pre 1 January 2020 |
| Article Type | Primary research, both qualitative and quantitative and all study designs. Preprints and any grey literature that present primary research are included. | Not primary research, including opinions, commentaries and guidelines. Secondary research, including reviews. |
CHWs, community health workers.
Example search terms
| Vaccine | |
| Vaccin* OR Immun* | |
| COVID-19 | ‘Coronavir*’ OR ‘SARS-CoV-2’ OR ‘Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2’ OR ‘COVID-19*’ |
| Community engagement | “citizen participat*” OR “citizen engagement” OR |
Data extraction template
| Characteristics context and population | Author/date | Location | Vaccine rates (precommunity engagement) | Vaccine commentary* | Target population | Population characteristics† | MMAT |
| Community engagement | Definition of community engagement | Community engagement description, justification | Who did community engagement: employment, training, payment | What did they do | When, where and how often | Community engagement reported outcomes | Equity considerations |
| Implementation characteristics | Individual level: | ||||||
| Implementation Evaluation and barriers | Reach: | ||||||
*Any reports on population/context vaccine views, including hesitancy, trust and confidence.
†Including residence location, gender, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, resident status, etc.