姆贝亚地区孕妇对COVID-19疫苗的知识、态度和接受程度

IF 2.5
PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-07-24 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004408
Revocatus Lawrence Kabanga, Vincent John Chambo, Rebecca Mokeha
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引用次数: 0

摘要

截至2022年8月8日,COVID-19已在全球造成约5.8亿例病例和640万人死亡,其中非洲有870万例病例(173063人死亡)。东非在2022年7月报告了139万例病例。截至2022年8月8日,坦桑尼亚确认了37,865例病例和841例死亡。尽管全球接种了数十亿剂疫苗,但只有17.6%的坦桑尼亚人完全接种了疫苗。有症状的孕妇面临的死亡风险比非孕妇高70%。因此,本研究旨在评估Mbeya地区孕妇对COVID-19疫苗的知识、态度和接受程度。在MZRH的妇产科进行了一项描述性横断面研究。参与者对COVID-19疫苗接种的知识,态度和接受度计算了三个分数。使用二元逻辑回归和卡方检验将这些分数与许多样本因素进行比较。这项研究招募了233名参与者。大多数参与者(31.3%)依赖社交媒体获取Covid-19疫苗信息。新冠肺炎疫苗知识贫乏(71.2%)、态度消极(76.8%)、接受率低(38.6%)。多因素分析显示,接受程度高与患有慢性疾病(AOR = 3.21, CI 1.448 ~ 7.123, P = 0.004)、对疫苗的态度较强(AOR = 1.26, CI 1.149 ~ 1.368, P = 0.015)、疫苗知识较好(AOR = 2.70, CI 2.587 ~ 2.810, P = 0.005)、既往接种史(AOR = 0.13, CI 0.068 ~ 0.183, P = 0.000)呈正相关。相反,对自然免疫的偏好(AOR = 0.42, CI 0.341-0.498, P = 0.018)和尚未接种疫苗(AOR = 0.67, CI 0.594-0.755, P = 0.000)都与较低的接受度有关。孕妇对COVID-19疫苗的知识、态度和接受程度较低。关于COVID-19疫苗的错误信息导致暂停。需要开展COVID-19疫苗接种教育,以提高孕妇的疫苗接种率。这一群体必须了解COVID-19免疫接种的重要性、安全性和有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Knowledge, attitudes and acceptance of COVID-19 vaccine among pregnant women in Mbeya Region.

COVID-19 has caused about 580 million cases and 6.4 million deaths worldwide by August 8th, 2022, including 8.7 million cases (173,063 deaths) in Africa. East Africa reported 1.39 million cases on July, 2022. Tanzania confirmed 37,865 cases and 841 deaths by 8th August 2022. Although billions of vaccine doses administered globally, just 17.6% of Tanzanians are fully vaccinated. Symptomatic pregnant women face a mortality risk that is 70% higher than in non-pregnant women.. Therefore, this study aimed at assessing knowledge, attitude, and acceptance of COVID-19 vaccine among pregnant women in the Mbeya region. A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted in the Obstetrics and Gynecology department of MZRH. Three scores were calculated for participants' knowledge, attitude, and acceptance to COVID-19 vaccination. These scores were compared to many sample factors using binary logistic regression and the chi-square test. The study recruited 233 participants. Most participants (31.3%) relied on social media for Covid-19 vaccine information. Poor Covid-19 vaccine knowledge (71.2%), negative attitudes (76.8%), and low acceptance rate (38.6%) were observed. Multivariate analysis showed that greater acceptance was positively associated with having a chronic illness (AOR = 3.21, CI 1.448-7.123, P = 0.004), stronger vaccine attitudes (AOR = 1.26, CI 1.149-1.368, P = 0.015), better vaccine knowledge (AOR = 2.70, CI 2.587-2.810, P = 0.005), and prior vaccination history (AOR = 0.13, CI 0.068-0.183, P = 0.000). Conversely, preference for natural immunity (AOR = 0.42, CI 0.341-0.498, P = 0.018), and not yet being vaccinated (AOR = 0.67, CI 0.594-0.755, P = 0.000) were all linked to lower acceptance. Pregnant women exhibited low knowledge, attitude, and acceptance to COVID-19 vaccines. Misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine causes pause. Education on COVID-19 vaccination is needed to enhance vaccine uptake among pregnant women. This group must comprehend COVID-19 immunization importance, safety, and efficacy.

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