巴基斯坦难民和移民中COVID-19疫苗行为和社会驱动因素的定性研究

PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-04-08 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004444
Zahra Ali Padhani, Maryam Hameed Khan, Rahima Yasin, Abdu R Rahman, Sohail Lakhani, Mushtaq Mirani, Muhammad Khan Jamali, Zahid Ali Khan, Sana Khatoon, Riya Partab, Atta Ul Haq, Vinay Kampalath, Seyed-Moeen Hosseinalipour, Karl Blanchet, Jai K Das
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引用次数: 0

摘要

移民和难民属于处境最不利的人群,他们获得和接种COVID-19疫苗的证据有限。因此,本定性研究通过对居住在巴基斯坦的正规和非正规移民和难民进行深入访谈和焦点小组讨论,探讨了巴基斯坦难民和移民人口中COVID-19疫苗的行为和社会驱动因素。与负责忽视COVID-19疫苗接种过程的利益攸关方进行了关键信息提供者访谈。共采访了18名参与者,以收集有关移民和难民中COVID-19疫苗获取、吸收和行为的见解。数据于2022年6月至7月在卡拉奇、海得拉巴和奎达收集。所有访谈均在Nvivo软件上进行录音、转录、翻译和专题分析。该研究发现,巴基斯坦的难民和移民社区在接种COVID-19疫苗方面面临重大挑战,障碍包括对疫苗安全性和有效性的误解、对副作用的恐惧以及宗教领袖的不信任传播。尽管政府指示允许没有计算机化国民身份证(CNIC)的人接种疫苗,但许多中心拒绝参与者接种疫苗。政府的外联和宣传工作有限,担心被识别和驱逐出境,在疫苗接种中心等待时间过长,以及在性别规范严格的社区缺乏女性疫苗接种员,这些都进一步阻碍了获得疫苗的机会。许多与会者还报告说,疫苗接种收费导致疫苗覆盖率降低。尽管存在这些挑战,但由于工作场所的要求、同伴的影响或个人健康问题,一些人还是有动力接种疫苗。推动者包括挨家挨户的疫苗接种运动和学校疫苗接种任务。非政府组织和政府机构在边境地区和移民富裕地区设立的疫苗接种营地为接种提供了便利。该研究提出了提高疫苗接种覆盖率的有针对性的策略,包括向移民提供身份证明文件,纳入政策,以及实施多语言交流以改善医疗保健服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A qualitative study on behavioral and social drivers of COVID-19 vaccine amongst refugees and migrants in Pakistan.

Migrants and refugees are among the most disadvantaged populations, with limited evidence on the access and uptake of COVID-19 vaccination among them. Therefore this qualitative study explores the behavioral and social drivers of the COVID-19 vaccine among the refugee and migrant population in Pakistan through in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with regular and irregular migrants and refugees residing in Pakistan. Key informant interviews were conducted with stakeholders responsible for overlooking the COVID-19 vaccination process. A total of 18 participants were interviewed to gather insights on COVID-19 vaccine access, uptake, and behaviours among migrants and refugees. Data was collection from June to July 2022, in Karachi, Hyderabad, and Quetta. All the interviews were audio recorded, transcribed, translated, and thematically analysed on Nvivo software. The study found that refugee and migrant communities in Pakistan faced significant challenges to COVID-19 vaccination uptake, with barriers including misconceptions about vaccine safety and efficacy, fears of side effects, and mistrust spread by religious leaders. Participants were refused vaccinations at many centers despite government directives allowing vaccines for those without Computerized National Identity Cards (CNIC). Limited outreach and awareness efforts from the government, fears of identification and deportation, long wait times at vaccination centers, and the absence of female vaccinators in communities with strict gender norms further hindered access. Many participants also reported being charged for vaccination leading to lower vaccine coverage. Despite these challenges, some individuals were motivated to vaccinate due to workplace requirements, peer influence, or personal health concerns. Facilitators included door-to-door vaccination campaigns and school vaccination mandates. Vaccination camps set up by NGOs and government agencies at border areas and migrant-rich districts facilitated access. The study suggests targeted strategies to improve vaccination coverage, including provision of identification documents to migrants, inclusion in policy, and enforcement of multilingual communication to improve healthcare access.

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