The reluctance to the vaccine, mental health, fear of covid-19 and quality of life among Palestinians: an exploratory comparative study in different geographical areas

IF 1.6 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
G. Veronese, A. Ismail, F. Mahamid, Basel El-Khodary, Dana Bdier, Marwan Diab
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Abstract

Purpose This study aims to explore the effect of mental health in terms of depression, anxiety, stress, fear of COVID-19 and quality of life (QoL) on the reluctance to be vaccinated in a population of Palestinian adults living in occupied Palestinian territories and Israel. Design/methodology/approach The authors recruited 1,122 Palestinian adults who consented to participate in the study; 722 were females, and the mean age of the sample was 40.83 (SD 8.8). Depression, anxiety, and stress scale (DASS), World Health Organization QoL-BREF, FCov-19 and reluctance to the vaccine scale were administered; hierarchical regression analysis was applied to test vaccine reluctance as a dependent variable, and mental health, fear of COVID-19 and QoL as independent variables. This study hypothesized influence of such variables on the vaccine choice with differences due to the participants’ geographical locations. Findings Findings showed an effect of mental health, particularly depression, QoL and fear of COVID on vaccine reluctance, with depression and fear of COVID in the West Bank and Gaza, while in Israel, QoL played a role in vaccination choices. Research limitations/implications The future needs to be comprehended more thoroughly to discover mutations and fluctuations over time in vaccine hesitancy and the increasing role of psychological distress, diminished QoL and fear of Covid-19. Online recruitment might not have allowed the study to include the most disadvantaged strips of the Palestinian population. Practical implications Human rights perspectives must be considered in public health and public mental health policies to ensure the QoL and well-being for the Palestinian population during and following the pandemic. Social implications The crumbling of the Palestinian health-care system exacerbated the sense of dread among the population and made them less likely to vaccinate. The pandemic-like spread of Covid-19 prompts a plea for the global community to actively advocate for the urgent re-establishment of equity, autonomy and durability of the medical infrastructure in the occupied territories and equal entitlements for the Palestinians in Israel. Originality/value The results demonstrated the importance for public mental health to consider the multiple levels implied in the vaccine refusal in Palestine and Israel among the Palestinian population.
巴勒斯坦人不愿接种疫苗、心理健康、对covid-19的恐惧和生活质量:不同地理区域的探索性比较研究
目的本研究旨在探讨心理健康在抑郁、焦虑、压力、对新冠肺炎的恐惧和生活质量(QoL)方面对居住在被占领巴勒斯坦领土和以色列的巴勒斯坦成年人不愿接种疫苗的影响;722名为女性,样本的平均年龄为40.83岁(SD 8.8)。使用抑郁、焦虑和压力量表(DASS)、世界卫生组织QoL BREF、FCov-19和对疫苗的不情愿量表;应用分层回归分析,以疫苗接种不情愿为因变量,以心理健康、对新冠肺炎的恐惧和生活质量为自变量。这项研究假设了这些变量对疫苗选择的影响,由于参与者的地理位置而存在差异。调查结果显示,心理健康,特别是抑郁、生活质量和对新冠肺炎的恐惧对疫苗接种意愿有影响,约旦河西岸和加沙的抑郁和对新新冠肺炎恐惧,而在以色列,生活质量在疫苗接种选择中发挥了作用。研究局限性/含义需要更彻底地理解未来,以发现疫苗犹豫中的突变和随时间的波动,以及心理困扰、生活质量下降和对新冠肺炎的恐惧的日益增加的作用。在线招聘可能不允许这项研究包括巴勒斯坦人口中最弱势的群体。实际影响在公共卫生和公共心理健康政策中必须考虑人权观点,以确保巴勒斯坦人民在疫情期间和之后的生活质量和福祉。社会影响巴勒斯坦医疗保健系统的崩溃加剧了民众的恐惧感,使他们不太可能接种疫苗。新冠肺炎的大规模传播促使国际社会积极倡导紧急重建公平,被占领土医疗基础设施的自主权和持久性,以及以色列巴勒斯坦人的平等权利。原始性/价值研究结果表明,考虑巴勒斯坦和以色列在巴勒斯坦人口中拒绝接种疫苗的多个层面对公共心理健康的重要性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Public Mental Health
Journal of Public Mental Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
7.10%
发文量
32
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