COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance among Low- and Lower-Middle-Income Countries: A Rapid Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Study Selection
2.3. Data Extraction
2.4. Assessment of Study Quality
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Search Results
3.2. Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.3. Prevalence of Vaccine Acceptance and Hesitancy
3.4. Sub-Group Analyses
3.5. Risk of Bias
4. Discussion
4.1. Implications and Future Research Needs
4.2. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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SL | Author | Country | Study Design | Survey Period | Target Population | Sample Size, n | Vaccine Acceptance (%) | Factors Associated with Vaccine Acceptance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Adebisi et al. [29] | Nigeria | Cross-sectional | August 2020 | General population | 517 | 74.47 | Age, geopolitical location, education level. |
2 | Ahmed et al. [30] | Somalia | Cross-sectional | 26 December 2020–28 January 2021 | General population | 4543 | 76.78 | Female, living in Galmudug, Hirshabelle and Southwest, student, worker in the healthcare sector, adherence score, presence of flu symptoms. |
3 | Ahmed et al. [20] | Pakistan | Cross-sectional | April 2021 | General population | 655 | 61.98 | Older age, sometimes/not following Anti-COVID-19 SOPs, high chance of being infected, vaccination having the potential of preventing COVID-19 spread, observing the effects of the vaccine on others, knowing more about the vaccine, belief that a Muslim’s trust in God was sufficient to protect one from infection, the vaccine was prepared in a hurry without sufficient testing and could harm those with low immunity, seeing everyone else getting vaccinated, pressure from friends and family. |
4 | Akiful Haque et al. [17] | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 17 January–2 February 2021 | General population | 7357 | 65.05 | Graduates or above, age ≥ 50 years, students, monthly income ≥ 41,000 BDT, rural resident, respondents from Khulna division, family members diagnosed with COVID-19, presence of chronic disease, vaccinated in the last few years. |
5 | Alam et al. [18] | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 3–25 January 2021 | Healthcare professionals | 831 | 43.80 | Female, 18–34 age group, work in public/government institutes, nurses, not having received the flu vaccine in the previous year. |
6 | Arshad et al. [19] | Pakistan | Cross-sectional | January 2021 | General population | 2158 | 48.19 | Gender, age, marital status, education level, occupation, profession, monthly income, residential area, myths, conspiracy beliefs. |
7 | Bongomin et al. [31] | Uganda | Cross-sectional | 29 March–14 April 2021 | General population | 317 | 68.14 | Female, patients who agreed or strongly agreed that they had some immunity against COVID-19, patients who had a history of vaccine hesitancy for their children. |
8 | Bono et al. [32] | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 10 December 2020–9 February 2021 | General population | 230 | 89.57 | COVID-19 knowledge, worry/fear regarding COVID-19, higher income, younger age, testing negative for COVID-19. |
DR Congo | 219 | 59.36 | ||||||
Benin | 159 | 48.43 | ||||||
Uganda | 107 | 88.79 | ||||||
Malawi | 81 | 61.73 | ||||||
Mali | 55 | 74.55 | ||||||
9 | Bono et al. [32] | The Democratic Republic of Congo | Cross-sectional | 24 August–8 September 2020 | General population | 4131 | 55.92 | Middle or high-income, being tested for COVID-19, COVID-19 community vaccine acceptance, acknowledging the existence of COVID-19, healthcare worker. |
10 | Carcelen et al. [33] | Zambia | Cross-sectional | 23–29 November 2020 | Caregivers | 2400 | 65.71 | Belief in the COVID-19 vaccine safety and efficacy. |
11 | Carpio et al. [34] | Kenya | Cross-sectional | 7–15 April 2020 | General population | 963 | 95.64 | Vaccine duration of protection and efficacy, perceived probability of being hospitalized, age, gender, education, location, region of residence, household income. |
12 | Dinga et al. [21] | Cameroon | Cross-sectional | May–August 2020 | General population | 2512 | 15.45 | NR * |
13 | Echoru et al. [35] | Western Uganda | Cross-sectional | July–September 2020 | General population | 1067 | 53.61 | Younger, male, tertiary level of students, Muslims, married, on-salary earners, rural dwellers. |
14 | Elgendy and Abdelrahim [36] | Egypt | Cross-sectional | April–May 2021 | General population | 871 | 88.06 | NR |
15 | El-Sokkary et al. [37] | Egypt | Cross-sectional | 25–31 January 2021 | Healthcare professionals | 308 | 25.97 | Income, years of experience. |
16 | Fares et al. [22] | Egypt | Observational | December 2020–January 2021 | Healthcare professionals | 385 | 21.04 | Male, interacting directly with COVID-19 patients, taking non-compulsory vaccines, recommending COVID-19 vaccination to others, receiving advice from hospitals to get the vaccine, trust in vaccine producers, pharmaceutical companies, and authorities. |
17 | Hammam et al. [38] | Egypt | Cross-sectional | April 2021 | Healthcare professionals | 187 | 30.48 | NR |
18 | Harapan et al. [8] | Indonesia | Cross-sectional | 25 March–6 April 2020 | General population | 1359 | 93.30 | Female, middle-aged, retired, married, healthcare worker, moderate perceived risk of COVID-19 infection. |
19 | Huynh et al. [39] | Vietnam | Cross-sectional | December 2020–January 2021 | General population | 425 | 84.00 | Knowledge of COVID-19, cues to action toward the vaccine. |
20 | Jain et al. [40] | India | Cross-sectional | 2 February–7 March 2021 | Healthcare students | 1068 | 89.42 | NR |
21 | Kanyike et al. [41] | Uganda | Cross-sectional | 15–21 March 2021 | Healthcare students | 600 | 37.33 | Male, being single, very high or moderate perceived risk of contracting COVID-19, receiving any vaccine in the past five years, COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, |
22 | Kaur et al. [42] | India | Cross-sectional | January 2021 | Healthcare professionals | 520 | 63.08 | Dental professional, involved in COVID-19 duties, preference for natural immunity over the vaccine, belief in COVID-19 vaccine safety, interest in vaccine information, belief that vaccine should be compulsory. |
23 | Kitonsa et al. [43] | Uganda | Cross-sectional | September–November 2020 | Healthcare professionals | 657 | 70.17 | NR |
24 | Kumari et al. [44] | India | Cross-sectional | 13–25 March 2021 | General population | 1294 | 83.54 | Older, belief that the vaccine is harmless, belief that vaccine benefits outweigh the risks, belief that getting vaccinated is a societal responsibility, belief that sufficient data about the vaccine is available, belief that the vaccine will eradicate COVID-19, role model getting vaccinated, many other people getting vaccinated, higher socioeconomic status, developed place of residence. |
25 | Lamptey et al. [45] | Ghana | Cross-sectional | 14 October–12 December 2020 | General population | 1000 | 54.10 | Being married, government worker, high-risk perceptions. |
26 | Lazarus et al. [46] | India | Cross-sectional | 16–20 June 2020 | General population | 742 | 74.53 | Male, older, higher education. |
Nigeria | 670 | 65.22 | ||||||
South Korea | 752 | 79.79 | ||||||
27 | Lazarus et al. [47] | South Korea | Cross-sectional | 16–20 June 2020 | General population | 619 to 773 | 79.79 | NR |
India | 74.53 | |||||||
Nigeria | 65.22 | |||||||
28 | Mohamad et al. [48] | Syria | Cross-sectional | 23 December 2020–5 January 2021 | General population | 3402 | 35.82 | Female, younger, urban resident, not married, no kids, not a healthcare worker, not a smoker, no fear of COVID-19, perceived severity of COVID-19, belief in the natural origin of the virus, knowledge on vaccine hesitancy. |
29 | Panda et al. [49] | India | Cross-sectional | February 2021 | General population | 359 | 8.08 | NR |
30 | Parvej et al. [50] | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 17–26 April 2021 | General population | 1529 | 67.04 | Muslim, highly educated, living in urban areas, believing vaccines protect against infectious diseases and vaccines, having no health-related risks. |
31 | Paudel et al. [51] | Nepal | Cross-sectional | 27 January–3 February 2021 | Healthcare professionals | 266 | 38.35 | NR |
32 | Qunaibi et al. [52] | Algeria | Cross-sectional | 14–29 January 2021 | General population | 2706 | 3.62 | Receiving the influenza vaccine regularly, health care worker, resident in country with higher rates of COVID-19 infections. |
Egypt | 5339 | 8.04 | ||||||
Mauritania | 99 | 8.08 | ||||||
Morocco | 3775 | 7.89 | ||||||
Sudan | 313 | 15.34 | ||||||
Syria | 1232 | 10.71 | ||||||
Tunisia | 665 | 6.47 | ||||||
Yemen | 226 | 9.29 | ||||||
33 | Ramesh Masthi and Sowmyashree [53] | India | Cross-sectional | January 2021 | General population | 846 | 64.42 | NR |
34 | Saied et al. [54] | Egypt | Cross-sectional | 8–15 January 2021 | Healthcare students | 2133 | 34.79 | Pharmacy student, higher academic year or graduate, average to very good self-perception of health status, good self-rated COVID-19 knowledge level, presence of confirmed COVID-19 infection in a close social network. |
35 | Skjefte et al. [55] | India | Cross-sectional | 28 October–18 November 2020 | Pregnant women, mothers of young children | 1639 | Pregnant women (52) Non-pregnant woman (73.4) | NR |
Philippines | 1034 | NR | ||||||
36 | Solis Arce et al. [15] | Burkina Faso | Cross-sectional | 15 October–4 December 2020 | General population | 977 | 66.53 | Protection for self, family, and community, recommendation from health workers and government. |
India | 17 June 2020–18 January 2021 | General population | 1680 | 84.29 | ||||
Mozambique | 30 October–30 November 2020 | General population | 862 | 89.10 | ||||
Nepal | 1–11 December 2020 | General population | 1389 | 96.62 | ||||
Nigeria | 18 November–18 December 2020 | General population | 1868 | 76.18 | ||||
Pakistan 1 | 24 July–9 September 2020 | General population | 1633 | 76.12 | ||||
Pakistan 2 | 2 September–13 October 2020 | General population | 1492 | 66.49 | ||||
Rwanda | 22 October–15 November 2020 | General population | 1355 | 84.87 | ||||
Sierra Leone 1 | 2–19 October 2020 | General population | 1070 | 78.04 | ||||
Sierra Leone 2 | 7 October 2020–20 January 2021 | General population | 2110 | 87.91 | ||||
Uganda 1 | 21 September–12 December 2020 | General population | 3362 | 85.81 | ||||
Uganda 2 | 23 November–12 December 2020 | General population | 1366 | 76.50 |
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Patwary, M.M.; Alam, M.A.; Bardhan, M.; Disha, A.S.; Haque, M.Z.; Billah, S.M.; Kabir, M.P.; Browning, M.H.E.M.; Rahman, M.M.; Parsa, A.D.; et al. COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance among Low- and Lower-Middle-Income Countries: A Rapid Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Vaccines 2022, 10, 427. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10030427
Patwary MM, Alam MA, Bardhan M, Disha AS, Haque MZ, Billah SM, Kabir MP, Browning MHEM, Rahman MM, Parsa AD, et al. COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance among Low- and Lower-Middle-Income Countries: A Rapid Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Vaccines. 2022; 10(3):427. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10030427
Chicago/Turabian StylePatwary, Muhammad Mainuddin, Md Ashraful Alam, Mondira Bardhan, Asma Safia Disha, Md. Zahidul Haque, Sharif Mutasim Billah, Md Pervez Kabir, Matthew H. E. M. Browning, Md. Mizanur Rahman, Ali Davod Parsa, and et al. 2022. "COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance among Low- and Lower-Middle-Income Countries: A Rapid Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" Vaccines 10, no. 3: 427. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10030427
APA StylePatwary, M. M., Alam, M. A., Bardhan, M., Disha, A. S., Haque, M. Z., Billah, S. M., Kabir, M. P., Browning, M. H. E. M., Rahman, M. M., Parsa, A. D., & Kabir, R. (2022). COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance among Low- and Lower-Middle-Income Countries: A Rapid Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Vaccines, 10(3), 427. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10030427