Effects of Local Faith-Actor Engagement in the Uptake and Coverage of Immunization in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Literature Review

Q4 Medicine
Sara Melillo, R. Strachan, C. J. O'Brien, C. Wonodi, M. Bormet, Douglas E. Fountain
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Introduction: Religious leaders are universally recognized as having an influence on immunization uptake and coverage in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Despite this, there is limited understanding of three questions: 1) how do religious leaders impact the uptake and coverage of immunization in LMICs? 2) what successful strategies exist for working with local faith actors to improve immunization acceptance? and 3) what evidence gaps exist in relation to faith engagement and immunization? Methods: In January 2021, we searched PubMed and Google Scholar databases covering the period from January 1, 2011, to January 15, 2021, with key search terms related to faith engagement and immunization in peer-reviewed literature and conducted a gray literature review to answer these three questions. We excluded articles covering faith engagement and immunization in high-income countries, news articles, online blogs, social media postings, and articles in languages outside of English. Data were coded to guide thematic analysis. Results: We found extensive evidence supporting the value of religious engagement for immunization promotion and acceptance in LMICs across faiths. However, there was limited rigorous evidence and examples of specific approaches for engaging local faith actors to strengthen immunization uptake in LMICs. As a result, there is a lack of widely shared knowledge of what works (or doesn’t) and successful models for engaging local faith actors.  Additional current evidence gaps include: few rigorous study designs; a lack of vaccine hesitancy studies outside of Nigeria and Pakistan; and limited exploration of faith engagement and immunization in religions other than Islam and Christianity. Conclusions: Our review findings reinforce the powerful role local faith actors play in diverse communities within LMICs in both promoting and inhibiting immunization uptake. The literature review comes at a critical time, given the urgent need to expand access to COVID-19 vaccination in LMICs. Findings from this review will advance understanding on how to more effectively engage local faith actors in promoting immunization campaigns and addressing vaccine hesitancy, which is more complex than expected. Further study is needed to understand how to most effectively counter vaccine hesitancy in different geographic, linguistic, and socio-cultural contexts.
在低收入和中等收入国家,当地信仰行为者参与免疫接种和覆盖的影响:文献综述
引言:宗教领袖被普遍认为对中低收入国家的免疫接种率和覆盖率有影响。尽管如此,对三个问题的理解有限:1)宗教领袖如何影响LMIC的免疫接种和覆盖率?2) 有哪些成功的战略可以与当地信仰行为者合作,提高免疫接种的接受度?以及3)在信仰参与和免疫接种方面存在哪些证据差距?方法:2021年1月,我们在PubMed和Google Scholar数据库中搜索了2011年1月1日至2021年1日期间的同行评审文献中与信仰参与和免疫相关的关键搜索词,并进行了灰色文献综述,以回答这三个问题。我们排除了涉及高收入国家信仰参与和免疫接种的文章、新闻文章、在线博客、社交媒体帖子以及英语以外语言的文章。对数据进行编码,以指导专题分析。结果:我们发现了广泛的证据支持宗教参与对不同信仰的LMIC的免疫宣传和接受的价值。然而,关于让当地信仰行为者参与加强LMIC免疫接种的具体方法的严格证据和例子有限。因此,缺乏关于什么有效(或无效)的广泛共享知识,也缺乏吸引当地信仰行为者的成功模式。目前的其他证据空白包括:很少有严格的研究设计;尼日利亚和巴基斯坦以外缺乏疫苗犹豫研究;以及对伊斯兰教和基督教以外宗教的信仰参与和免疫的有限探索。结论:我们的审查结果强化了当地信仰行为者在LMIC内不同社区中在促进和抑制免疫接种方面发挥的强大作用。鉴于迫切需要扩大LMIC中新冠肺炎疫苗接种的机会,文献综述正处于关键时刻。这项审查的结果将促进对如何更有效地让当地信仰行为者参与促进免疫接种运动和解决疫苗犹豫问题的理解,这比预期的要复杂。需要进一步研究,以了解如何在不同的地理、语言和社会文化背景下最有效地应对疫苗犹豫。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Christian Journal for Global Health
Christian Journal for Global Health Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
8 weeks
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