Sharma Anjali, Kerkhoff Andrew D, Haambokoma Mwiza, Shamoya Bertha, Sikombe Kombatende, Simbeza Sandra S, Zulu Nelly, Geng Elvin H, Eshun-Wilsonova Ingrid, Le Tourneau Noelle, Pry Jake M
Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.
Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
Vaccine. 2025 Mar 19;50:126846. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2025.126846. Epub 2025 Feb 11.
To estimate intention to receive newly introduced adult vaccines among community members and healthcare workers (HCWs) in Lusaka, Zambia in the context of previous COVID-19 vaccine uptake and perceived disease threat and, identify trusted sources of vaccine information.
We conducted a cross-sectional survey among a random sample of community members and a convenience sample of HCWs from 13 November to 15 December 2023. We evaluated future vaccination intentions by self-reported COVID-19 vaccine uptake, community role, vaccine type (COVID-19 booster, HIV, tuberculosis, malaria, pneumonia, diarrheal disease) and source of information using adjusted, mixed effects Poisson regression and adjusted probability models.
We enrolled 395 (79.2 %) community members and 104 (20.8 %) HCWs (N = 499). There was high intention to receive new vaccines among community members (mean score = 83.6 %) and HCWs (mean score = 86.0 %), though intentions varied by vaccine type. Prior COVID-19 vaccine uptake (0, 1, 2+ doses) impacted intentions to receive a novel COVID-19 vaccine among community members (43.3 %, 62.8 %, 79.7 %, respectively) but were not associated with any other vaccine types. Intention to receive a vaccine was strongly associated with perceived disease severity and susceptibility as well as age, sex, education, and household income. Social media as a vaccine information source was associated with lower overall vaccine intention among community members, while health system and community sources were associated with higher overall intention to receive new vaccines. Government was a highly trusted source of vaccine information among all participants.
Prior COVID-19 vaccination uptake did not predict future non-COVID-19 vaccine intention in Zambia. Perceived threat and select socio-demographic factors were key predictors, suggesting the need for rapid research to design communication strategies and identify trusted sources per target population.
在赞比亚卢萨卡社区成员和医护人员(HCWs)中,结合此前新冠疫苗接种情况以及感知到的疾病威胁,评估他们接种新推出的成人疫苗的意愿,并确定可信的疫苗信息来源。
2023年11月13日至12月15日,我们对社区成员的随机样本和医护人员的便利样本进行了横断面调查。我们通过自我报告的新冠疫苗接种情况、社区角色、疫苗类型(新冠加强针、艾滋病毒、结核病、疟疾、肺炎、腹泻病)以及信息来源,使用调整后的混合效应泊松回归和调整后的概率模型来评估未来的疫苗接种意愿。
我们招募了395名(79.2%)社区成员和104名(20.8%)医护人员(N = 499)。社区成员(平均得分 = 83.6%)和医护人员(平均得分 = 86.0%)接种新疫苗的意愿较高,不过意愿因疫苗类型而异。此前新冠疫苗的接种情况(0剂、1剂、2剂及以上)影响了社区成员接种新型新冠疫苗的意愿(分别为43.3%、62.8%、79.7%),但与任何其他疫苗类型均无关联。接种疫苗的意愿与感知到的疾病严重程度和易感性以及年龄、性别、教育程度和家庭收入密切相关。社交媒体作为疫苗信息来源与社区成员较低的总体疫苗接种意愿相关,而卫生系统和社区来源则与较高总体接种新疫苗意愿相关。在所有参与者中,政府是高度可信的疫苗信息来源。
在赞比亚,此前的新冠疫苗接种情况并不能预测未来的非新冠疫苗接种意愿。感知到的威胁和特定的社会人口因素是关键预测因素,这表明需要迅速开展研究,以设计针对目标人群的沟通策略并确定可信信息来源。