Factors Related to the Compliance of Arab Parents in Israel to the Vaccination of Children and Adolescents against COVID-19
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Objectives of the Study
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
5. Discussion
- Age eligibility: The COVID-19 vaccines initially received emergency use authorization for adults, with vaccination campaigns prioritizing older individuals and those at higher risks. As a result, parents were eligible for vaccination before their children. Furthermore, understanding the mortality rate of the disease for certain populations revealed that the virus is more harmful to older people and to those with certain illnesses like cardiac, malignant, and lung diseases and diabetes. If young people were more vulnerable to the virus, clinical trials of the vaccine would have started with a younger cutoff [21].
- Vaccine availability: Vaccine distribution and availability varied across different regions and countries. It is possible that parents were able to access the vaccine sooner than their children due to logistical factors or variations in vaccine rollout plans. In Israel, younger people, at the early stages of the vaccine rollout, could get vaccinated only if they were at a higher risk of infection, e.g., if they were volunteers in health systems or severely ill. Healthy adolescents and young children who were not at a high risk of infection were the last to get vaccinated because of the shortage of vaccines during the first stages of the pandemic. The vaccines were not distributed to all countries evenly and wealthier countries purchased the vaccines before others [22]. In Israel, there was a shortage of vaccines at the first stages of the pandemic (physical boundaries). Furthermore, like we have shown in a previous study, in the early stages of vaccination, access to the vaccine among the Arab adults was lower than that among the general community in rural areas in Israel [18]. However, the coverage of vaccination of Arab children was like that among the general population and there were no physical boundaries to get the vaccine;
- Risk assessment: Parents might have assessed the risks and benefits of vaccination differently for themselves and their children. COVID-19 tends to pose a higher risk to older individuals or those with underlying health conditions. Parents probably perceived their own risk of contracting severe diseases to be higher than that of their siblings and, therefore, might have prioritized getting vaccinated to protect themselves. During the pandemic, children had lower risks of developing severe illnesses and some who were infected with the virus were quite asymptomatic. Furthermore, parents probably did not consider that these asymptomatic children could infect older ones in the family. This somehow, in our study, may explain why older parents tended to vaccinate their children more than younger ones, as was shown in some other studies [23]. Since Israeli Arabs live in closed communities, we had expected that they would show more concern for their elderly. However, other cultural factors specific to the community might have played a role, as Al-Ghuraibi et al. found among Arabs in Saudi Arabia [24];
- Vaccine hesitancy or concerns: Following the introduction of the vaccine to adolescents and children, there was some hesitancy among the general population as to whether to vaccinate children and adolescents as the disease symptoms were less significant among the young population. On the other hand, infected children could be a risk factor in infecting the older population with the new variants. Furthermore, there was an argument as to whether this young population was in need of vaccination as there was a decline in the number of severe cases among the older population. In addition, parents were perhaps awaiting longer-term safety data, seeking additional medical advice, or considering factors like the child’s age, health condition, or potential side effects of the vaccine. Parents might have felt more confident about getting vaccinated themselves but they were more cautious about vaccinating their children;
- Trust in the vaccines: Individual attitudes toward vaccination can vary. Parents might have shown more trust in the safety and efficacy of the COVID-19 vaccines for themselves, based on research, personal experiences, and/or conversations with healthcare professionals. However, they apparently had reservations or uncertainties about vaccinating their children, requiring further information or reassurance before proceeding. Yet, among the Bedouin Arabs in Israel, the authorities had difficulties in vaccinating children against common infant viruses (like polio) due to physical barriers and the government’s neglect of this Arab community [25];
- Pandemic fatigue: Studies have revealed that pandemic fatigue was positively correlated with low compliance with safety instructions and reluctance to get vaccinated. The longer the pandemic lasted, the more anxious and exhausted people became, leading to indifference to the risks of the virus. This may partially explain the lower percentage of young children who were vaccinated compared to adolescents as the vaccination of young children happened toward the end of the pandemic [26];
- Psychological subjective barriers and social norms: Although not all Israeli Arabs live in rural areas, they still live in communities in towns where social norms play a role in their attitude toward vaccinating their children. Social norms were shown to affect the willingness of adults to be vaccinated at the beginning of the pandemic [27]. In closed communities, social norms may play significant roles in choosing to vaccinate against COVID-19. The strength of the relationship tends to decline as the queried social group grows larger and indeed so are the effects of social norms on the vaccination of children [28];
- Social media networks (SMN): In this pandemic, social media played a significant influence on people’s perception of the severity of disease, the reliability and dangers of vaccination, and there was a great competition between the official media and the SMN. We are facing a new era were SMN and faked news or videos may influence peoples’ decisions very badly [29]. In a previous study among Israeli Arabs, at the beginning of the vaccinations of the adults, we witnessed a great deal of misinformation published in the SMN, some of which were arguably unreasonable. Many Arabs positively responded to a question in our study that addresses the fear of Arabs from government’s intention to use the vaccination as a tool through which to inject a chip and follow Arab minority movements in the country [18]. However, it took a while until vaccinations reached young children and this misinformation subsided. Yet, the SMN continued to be very active and an argument was raised against vaccinating young children as it was not proved safe enough. This might have added to the whole population’s hesitancy as well as to that of Arabs citizens who live mainly in smaller communities and share misinformation very easily. However, since Arabs in Israel are a minority living in different demographic characteristic from Arabs in neighboring Arab countries, the authors did not find a place to compare the results with other countries in the region.
6. Conclusions
7. Limitations of the Study
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | |
---|---|
Mean age, years (SD), range | 39.45 (6.33), 25–59 |
Gender, female, n (%) | 297 (82.3%) |
Family status, married, n (%) | 351 (97.2%) |
Mean number of children (SD), range | 3.14 (1.18), 1–9 |
Adolescent offspring (age 12–15), yes, n (%) | 189 (52.4%) |
Child offspring (age 5–11), yes, n (%) | 302 (83.7%) |
Education, n (%) | |
High school or less | 55 (15.2%) |
Above high school | 40 (11.1%) |
B.A. (or a B.A. student) | 127 (35.2%) |
M.A. student | 42 (11.6%) |
M.A., Ph.D | 97 (26.9%) |
Area of living, northern Israel, n (%) | 295 (81.7%) |
Type of living, rural, n (%) | 242 (67.0%) |
Religion, n (%) | |
Muslim | 242 (67.0%) |
Christian | 103 (28.5%) |
Druze | 14 (3.9%) |
Other | 2 (0.6%) |
Religiosity, n (%) | |
Secular | 42 (11.6%) |
Partly religious | 210 (58.2) |
Religious | 109 (30.2) |
Employment, yes, n (%) | 250 (69.3%) |
Economic status, n (%) | |
Below average | 126 (34.9%) |
Average | 140 (38.8%) |
Above average | 95 (26.3%) |
Offspring’s health, all healthy, n (%) | 350 (97.0) |
Characteristics | |
---|---|
Parent vaccination, n (%) | |
Three or four vaccinations | 213 (59.0%) |
Two vaccinations, was sick, or was sick and one vaccination | 134 (37.1%) |
No vaccination | 14 (3.9%) |
Adolescent vaccination, (n = 189), n (%) | |
Yes, one to three vaccinations | 128 (67.7%) |
No vaccination | 61 (32.3%) |
Child vaccination, (n = 302), n (%) | |
Yes, one to three vaccinations | 59 (19.5%) |
No vaccination | 243 (80.5%) |
M (SD) | 1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. | 7. | 8. | 9. | 10. | 11. | 12. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Child vaccination | 0.20 (0.40) | 1 | |||||||||||
2. Adolescent vaccination | 0.68 (0.47) | 0.39 ** | 1 | ||||||||||
3. Attitudes | 2.34 (1.12) | 0.62 ** | 0.42 ** | 1 | |||||||||
4. Subjective norms | 2.55 (0.84) | 0.32 ** | 0.31 ** | 0.49 ** | 1 | ||||||||
5. Susceptibility | 3.90 (1.00) | −0.01 | −0.01 | −0.15 * | −0.02 | 1 | |||||||
6. Severity | 2.29 (0.90) | 0.37 ** | 0.34 ** | 0.56 ** | 0.51 ** | 0.01 | 1 | ||||||
7. Barriers | 3.62 (1.03) | −0.58 ** | −0.47 ** | −0.70 ** | −0.48 ** | 0.04 | −0.45 ** | 1 | |||||
8. Benefits | 2.82 (1.11) | 0.49 ** | 0.45 ** | 0.55 ** | 0.56 ** | −0.01 | 0.49 ** | −0.54 ** | 1 | ||||
9. Pandemic fatigue | 3.94 (0.84) | −0.24 ** | −0.23 * | −0.43 ** | −0.26 ** | 0.13 | −0.34 ** | 0.49 ** | −0.30 ** | 1 | |||
10. Trust—formal | 2.64 (0.89) | 0.28 ** | 0.20 * | 0.30 ** | 0.34 ** | −0.01 | 0.35 ** | −0.31 ** | 0.46 ** | −0.43 ** | 1 | ||
11. COVID harmed child | 3.64 (0.80) | 0.01 | −0.01 | −0.08 | −0.06 | 0.18 ** | −0.02 | 0.05 | 0.14 * | 0.22 ** | −0.02 | 1 | |
12. Information sources | 2.85 (0.91) | 0.18 * | 0.18 * | 0.18 ** | 0.37 ** | 0.14 * | 0.28 ** | −0.23 ** | 0.39 ** | −0.27 ** | 0.50 ** | 0.08 | 1 |
Child Vaccination (n = 302) | Adolescent Vaccination (n = 189) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
B (SE) | OR (95% CI) | p | B (SE) | OR (95% CI) | p | |
Parent age | 0.01 (0.04) | 1.00 (0.93, 1.08) | 0.923 | 0.03 (0.03) | 1.03 (0.97, 1.09) | 0.375 |
Economic status | 0.01 (0.21) | 1.00 (0.67, 1.5) | 0.999 | 0.07 (0.14) | 1.08 (0.82, 1.41) | 0.601 |
Attitudes | 1.24 (0.30) | 3.47 (1.93, 6.24) | <0.001 | 0.36 (0.26) | 1.43 (0.86, 2.36) | 0.164 |
Subjective norms | −0.40 (0.36) | 0.67 (0.33, 1.35) | 0.260 | −0.17 (0.35) | 0.85 (0.42, 1.69) | 0.639 |
Susceptibility | 0.21 (0.24) | 1.23 (0.77, 1.98) | 0.384 | 0.20 (0.20) | 1.22 (0.83, 1.8) | 0.319 |
Severity | 0.11 (0.31) | 1.11 (0.61, 2.04) | 0.727 | −0.10 (0.31) | 0.91 (0.50, 1.66) | 0.748 |
Barriers | −0.73 (0.31) | 0.48 (0.26, 0.89) | 0.019 | −1.26 (0.36) | 0.28 (0.14, 0.57) | 0.000 |
Benefits | 0.63 (0.30) | 1.88 (1.04, 3.38) | 0.036 | 0.90 (0.27) | 2.45 (1.45, 4.14) | 0.001 |
Pandemic fatigue | 0.35 (0.32) | 1.42 (0.75, 2.66) | 0.279 | 0.28 (0.32) | 1.32 (0.70, 2.48) | 0.386 |
Trust—formal | 0.45 (0.36) | 1.56 (0.77, 3.19) | 0.220 | −0.36 (0.27) | 0.70 (0.41, 1.19) | 0.186 |
COVID harmed child | 0.13 (0.29) | 1.14 (0.64, 2.02) | 0.656 | −0.24 (0.28) | 0.79 (0.45, 1.36) | 0.390 |
Information sources | 0.03 (0.36) | 1.03 (0.51, 2.08) | 0.928 | 0.15 (0.25) | 1.16 (0.71, 1.89) | 0.545 |
Nagelkerke’s R2 | 0.605 | 0.445 | ||||
χ2 (12) | 141.08, p < 0.001 | 71.60, p < 0.001 |
No Vaccination of Both Child and Adolescent (n = 48) M (SD) | Adolescent Vaccination (n = 52) M (SD) | Child and Adolescent Vaccination (n = 29) M (SD) | F(2, 124) (p) (η2) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Attitudes | 1.76 c (0.89) | 2.22 b (0.90) | 3.59 a (0.91) | 35.58 (p < 0.001) (η2 = 0.365) |
Subjective norms | 2.23 b (0.88) | 2.57 ab (0.83) | 3.09 a (0.78) | 8.18 (p < 0.001) (η2 = 0.117) |
Susceptibility | 3.75 (1.21) | 3.83 (1.02) | 3.66 (1.08) | 0.14 (p = 0.869) (η2 = 0.002) |
Severity | 1.90 b (0.80) | 2.27 b (0.86) | 2.90 a (0.86) | 11.37 (p < 0.001) (η2 = 0.156) |
Barriers | 4.30 a (0.64) | 3.67 b (0.96) | 2.57 c (0.92) | 34.74 (p < 0.001) (η2 = 0.361) |
Benefits | 2.22 c (0.92) | 2.88 b (1.05) | 3.72 a (0.71) | 21.96 (p < 0.001) (η2 = 0.263) |
Pandemic fatigue | 4.29 a (0.66) | 3.88 b (0.85) | 3.71 b (0.81) | 5.57 (p = 0.005) (η2 = 0.083) |
Trust—formal | 2.31 b (0.89) | 2.54 b (0.75) | 3.07 a (0.93) | 6.30 (p = 0.002) (η2 = 0.093) |
COVID harmed child | 3.70 (0.89) | 3.69 (0.68) | 3.59 (1.01) | 0.18 (p = 0.832) (η2 = 0.003) |
Information sources | 2.58 b (0.94) | 3.01 a (0.75) | 3.14 a (0.94) | 4.38 (p = 0.015) (η2 = 0.068) |
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Ali-Saleh, O.; Khatib, M.; Hadid, S.; Dahamsheh, K.; Basis, F. Factors Related to the Compliance of Arab Parents in Israel to the Vaccination of Children and Adolescents against COVID-19. Vaccines 2023, 11, 1540. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11101540
Ali-Saleh O, Khatib M, Hadid S, Dahamsheh K, Basis F. Factors Related to the Compliance of Arab Parents in Israel to the Vaccination of Children and Adolescents against COVID-19. Vaccines. 2023; 11(10):1540. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11101540
Chicago/Turabian StyleAli-Saleh, Ola, Mohammad Khatib, Salam Hadid, Kamal Dahamsheh, and Fuad Basis. 2023. "Factors Related to the Compliance of Arab Parents in Israel to the Vaccination of Children and Adolescents against COVID-19" Vaccines 11, no. 10: 1540. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11101540