Abstract

Introduction: Although vaccines are the safest and most effective means to prevent and control infectious diseases, the increasing rate of vaccine hesitancy and refusal (VHR) has become a worldwide concern. We aimed to find opinions of parents on vaccinating their children and contribute to available literature in order to support the fight against vaccine refusal by investigating the reasons for VHR on a global scale.

Methodology: In this international cross-sectional multicenter study conducted by the Infectious Diseases International Research Initiative (ID-IRI), a questionnaire consisting of 20 questions was used to determine parents’ attitudes towards vaccination of their children.

Results: Four thousand and twenty-nine (4,029) parents were included in the study and 2,863 (78.1%) were females. The overall VHR rate of the parents was found to be 13.7%. Nineteen-point three percent (19.3%) of the parents did not fully comply with the vaccination programs. The VHR rate was higher in high-income (HI) countries. Our study has shown that parents with disabled children and immunocompromised children, with low education levels, and those who use social media networks as sources of information for childhood immunizations had higher VHR rates (p < 0.05 for all).

Conclusions: Seemingly all factors leading to VHR are related to training of the community and the sources of training. Thus, it is necessary to develop strategies at a global level and provide reliable knowledge to combat VHR.

Details

Title
Vaccine hesitancy and refusal among parents: An international ID-IRI survey
Author
Cag, Yakup; Mohammad Emad al Madadha; Ankarali, Handan; Cag, Yasemin; Kubra Demir Onder; Seremet-Keskin, Aysegul; Kizilates, Filiz; Rok Čivljak; Shehata, Ghaydaa; Alay, Handan; Alkan-Ceviker, Sevil; Yilmaz-Karadag, Fatma; Cagla-Sonmezer, Meliha; Ramadan, Manar Ezzelarab; Dumitru, Irina Magdelena; Radic, Ljiljana Betica; Jurica Arapovic; Kesmez-Can, Fatma; Nagwa Mostafa El-Sayed; Campbell, Oladapo Babatunde; Eser-Karlidag, Gulden; Khedr, Reham; Isik, Mehmet Emirhan; Michael Mihailov Petrov; Cernat, Roxana; Erturk, Umran; Uygun-Kizmaz, Yesim; Huljev, Eva; Amer, Fatma; Mehmet Resat Ceylan; Marino, Andrea; Kul, Gulnur; Damar-Cakirca, Tuba; Yara Mohsen Khalaf; Isik, Arzu Cennet; Ariyo, Olumuyiwa Elijah; Hakyemez, Ismail Necati; Rezaul Karim Ripon; Afkhamzadeh, Abdorrahim; Dindar-Demiray, Emine Kubra; Osasona Oluwadamilola Gideon; Belitova, Maya; Altindis, Mustafa; El-Sokkary, Rehab; Tekin, Recep; Mohammed Ahmed Garout; Zajkowska, Joanna; Fazal, Farhan; Bekcibasi, Muhammed; Hukic, Mirsada; Nizamuddin, Summiya; Surme, Serkan; Fernandez, Ricardo; El-Kholy, Amani; Akhtar, Nasim; Ijaz, Saadia; Cortegiani, Andrea; Meric-Koc, Meliha; Hasman, Hakan; Agah, Victor Maduka; Jehan Ali ElKholy; Sari, Sema; Mumtaz Ali Khan; Akin, Yasemin; Kose, Sukran; Erdem, Hakan
Pages
1081-1088
Section
Original Articles
Publication year
2022
Publication date
Jun 2022
Publisher
Journal of Infection in Developing Countries
ISSN
20366590
e-ISSN
19722680
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2689588829
Copyright
© 2022. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.