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Examining drivers of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in Ghana

Examining drivers of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in Ghana
Examining drivers of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in Ghana
We conducted a nationally representative online survey in Ghana (N = 1295) throughout June 2021.

In our analyses, we operationalised vaccine hesitancy as respondents who answered ‘no’ and ‘I don’t know’ to the question: “When a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available to you, would you like to get vaccinated?”

Some top-level findings to share
- willingness to vaccinate dropped from 82% in March, to 71% in June 2021
- Therefore, to phrase another way, there was an observed and significant increase in hesitancy, from 18% to 29% across this time period.
- 32% of respondents reported that they had recently seen or heard stories about the indecision surrounding the Oxford Astrazeneca vaccine rollout in Europe and North America. Of this 32% subgroup, 62.0% of them indicated that these stories made them feel worried about accepting the COVID-19 vaccine in the future.
- Our main predictors of hesitancy continue to include: i) education (more educated people were more likely to be hesitant; one hypothesis is perhaps more likely to have greater access to the internet and thus availability of misinformation via social media); ii) females more hesitant than males; and iii) political allegiance (voting for the opposition parties was greater predictor of hesitancy).

We hope that this information can be helpful with informing the health promotion efforts from the GHS, Ministry of Health and other stakeholders.
figshare
Brackstone, Ken
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Boateng, Laud
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Atengble, Kirchuffs
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Head, Michael
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Akinocho, Herve
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Osei, Kingsley
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Nuamah, Kwabena
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Brackstone, Ken
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Boateng, Laud
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Atengble, Kirchuffs
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Head, Michael
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Akinocho, Herve
f122a22d-ff67-4409-bc3c-11375ba7c49d
Osei, Kingsley
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Nuamah, Kwabena
1ef91b2b-64ec-4c41-a87d-3f27903c6b29

Brackstone, Ken, Boateng, Laud, Atengble, Kirchuffs, Head, Michael, Akinocho, Herve, Osei, Kingsley and Nuamah, Kwabena (2021) Examining drivers of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in Ghana figshare 12pp. (doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.14494851.v3).

Record type: Monograph (Project Report)

Abstract

We conducted a nationally representative online survey in Ghana (N = 1295) throughout June 2021.

In our analyses, we operationalised vaccine hesitancy as respondents who answered ‘no’ and ‘I don’t know’ to the question: “When a COVID-19 vaccine becomes available to you, would you like to get vaccinated?”

Some top-level findings to share
- willingness to vaccinate dropped from 82% in March, to 71% in June 2021
- Therefore, to phrase another way, there was an observed and significant increase in hesitancy, from 18% to 29% across this time period.
- 32% of respondents reported that they had recently seen or heard stories about the indecision surrounding the Oxford Astrazeneca vaccine rollout in Europe and North America. Of this 32% subgroup, 62.0% of them indicated that these stories made them feel worried about accepting the COVID-19 vaccine in the future.
- Our main predictors of hesitancy continue to include: i) education (more educated people were more likely to be hesitant; one hypothesis is perhaps more likely to have greater access to the internet and thus availability of misinformation via social media); ii) females more hesitant than males; and iii) political allegiance (voting for the opposition parties was greater predictor of hesitancy).

We hope that this information can be helpful with informing the health promotion efforts from the GHS, Ministry of Health and other stakeholders.

Text
Ghana Vaccine Hesitancy Report 3rd survey july 2021 - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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More information

Published date: 19 July 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 451820
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451820
PURE UUID: 90048858-3f56-4627-9148-2366bb0d2caf
ORCID for Ken Brackstone: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6882-3260
ORCID for Michael Head: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1189-0531

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Date deposited: 28 Oct 2021 16:35
Last modified: 15 Mar 2025 02:48

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Contributors

Author: Ken Brackstone ORCID iD
Author: Laud Boateng
Author: Kirchuffs Atengble
Author: Michael Head ORCID iD
Author: Herve Akinocho
Author: Kingsley Osei
Author: Kwabena Nuamah

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