logo
Science Portal
Copyright © Médecins Sans Frontières
v2.1.5127.produseast1
About MSF Science Portal
About
Contact Us
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Copyright © Médecins Sans Frontières
v2.1.5127.produseast1
The burden of vaccine hesitancy for routine immunization in Yaounde-Cameroon: restrictive sampling technique | Journal Article / Pre-Print | MSF Science Portal
Journal Article
|Pre-Print

The burden of vaccine hesitancy for routine immunization in Yaounde-Cameroon: restrictive sampling technique

Yakum MN, Funwie AD, Ajong AB, Tsafack M, Ebaze LE, Shah Z
Download

Similar Content
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Abstract
Immunization is the most cost-effective health intervention in the world yet, vaccination uptake is still low with less than 50% of children aged 12-23 months fully vaccinated Cameroon. The objective of this study was to estimate the burden of vaccine hesitancy associated with routine EPI vaccines in Yaounde-Cameroon. A two-stage cross-sectional cluster survey was conducted in Yaoundé in May-June 2022, targeting parents/guardians of children 0-59 months. Clusters were selected with probability proportionate to size (PPS) and household’s selection done using a restricted sampling method. Data collection was done using an interviewer-administered questionnaire. Data were cleaned using MS-Excel 2019, and analyzed with R version 4.1.0 (2021-05-18). A total of 529 participants were enrolled out of 708 visited, giving a non-response rate of 25%. In total, vaccine hesitancy was reported in 137(25.90[22.35-29.80] %), and vaccine hesitancy prevalence did not vary significantly across different households’ wealth levels (p-value= 0.3786). However, in wealthy households’ refusal of vaccines (14%) was less than in poorer households (20%). Lack of trust, confidence, and perceived complacency are the leading causes of vaccine hesitancy related to routine immunization in Yaounde-Cameroon. We, therefore, recommend that the burden of vaccine hesitancy should be assessed at national scale and identify sources of misinformation that are at the origin of vaccine hesitancy. Having a clear notion of the effect of social media(Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, etc,), radio, TV, and other information sources might guide interventions to combat vaccine hesitancy.

Countries

Cameroon

Subject Area

vaccinationmeaslesrotavirusyellow fever

Languages

English
DOI
10.1101/2022.02.17.22271108
Published Date
21 Feb 2022
Journal
medRxiv
Dimensions Badge