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Factors influencing parents’ hesitancy to vaccinate their children aged 5–11 years old against COVID-19: results from a cross-sectional study in Malaysia

Factors influencing parents’ hesitancy to vaccinate their children aged 5–11 years old against COVID-19: results from a cross-sectional study in Malaysia
Factors influencing parents’ hesitancy to vaccinate their children aged 5–11 years old against COVID-19: results from a cross-sectional study in Malaysia

Introduction: Vaccination programs have been rolled out across the globe to contain and mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 infection. Until recently, such programs were limited to adults and the older population, thereby limiting children from getting vaccinated. Recently, the Malaysian government rolled out vaccination for children aged 5–11 years. However, there are certain factors that might affect vaccination uptake among children. This study explores factors influencing parents’ hesitancy to vaccinate children in Malaysia. Method: A nationwide online cross-sectional convenience sampling survey from April 21, 2022 to June 3, 2022 was conducted. The study used descriptive statistics to inform about vaccine hesitancy among parents. Cross-tabulation was performed to calculate the frequency and percentage of vaccine hesitancy, quality of life, e-health literacy, and the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination among parents with children 5-11 years in Malaysia. Graphical methods were used to portray the levels of e-health literacy and levels of 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination. The study used both bi-variate and multivariate analysis to understand the relationship between vaccine hesitancy and the socio-demo-economic factors, quality of life, e-health literacy and 5C psychological antecedents. Results: Of 382 participants, almost one-third (33%) of participants reported vaccine hesitancy for their children. For 5C’s psychological antecedents of vaccination, around one quarter (26.96%) reported disagreement for confidence in vaccination, almost half (52.36%) reported disagreement for vaccination complacency, three-fifths (60.99%) reported vaccination constraint, one quarter (25.92%) reported calculation antecedent, and almost one-third reported disagreement over collective responsibility antecedent (25.92%). Chi-square test revealed that gender, employment status, and parents’ COVID-19 vaccination status were significantly associated (p<0.05) with vaccine hesitancy among parents. Assessing the influence of transactional e-health literacy, only the communication component contained a significant association (p<0.05). Among the 5C psychological antecedents, confidence, calculation, and collective responsibility were significantly associated (p<0.05) with vaccine hesitancy. Parents with secondary [OR: 8.80; CI: 2.44−31.79, (p<0.05)], post-secondary [OR: 5.21; CI: 2.10-13.41, (p<0.05)], and tertiary education [OR: 6.77; CI: 2.25−20.35, (p<0.05)] had significantly higher likelihood of vaccine hesitancy than those with primary education. Conclusion: Highly educated parents are more skeptical and are more likely to perceive the vaccine as unsafe and ineffective for their children. It is critical to disseminate the required information about the vaccine safety to the educated group.

children, COVID-19, health education and awareness, Malaysia, vaccine hesitancy
2296-2565
Marzo, Roy Rillera
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Chakraborty, Ritankar
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Yih Soh, Shean
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Thew, Hui Zhu
dcc69e89-ced6-4fb8-ab98-652a48fc08fe
Chong, Collins
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Siau, Ching Sin
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Wahab, Khairuddin Bin Abdul
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Ariffin, Indang Ariati Binti
718e52f5-549c-467a-9dd5-00907a67967d
Chauhan, Shekhar
1cb3100d-2dc3-49bb-90c1-61f888263a38
Brackstone, Ken
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Padhi, Bijaya Kumar
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Heidler, Petra
ac96a23a-21c5-49fd-8274-cf0a4d3f6138
Marzo, Roy Rillera
9252d595-62b7-4559-8291-a6d0e0bdaf6b
Chakraborty, Ritankar
35638385-4887-4686-b52c-5a41dad93d79
Yih Soh, Shean
3222d72d-7f12-43b7-a9ae-74348eae124e
Thew, Hui Zhu
dcc69e89-ced6-4fb8-ab98-652a48fc08fe
Chong, Collins
dd91fbf2-ae8d-4521-b90f-8d1a9458de56
Siau, Ching Sin
8ad828a0-a068-4bc4-ad8e-cba23eb10baf
Wahab, Khairuddin Bin Abdul
30179ef6-b797-44a8-8b40-f43f3e962eb1
Ariffin, Indang Ariati Binti
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Chauhan, Shekhar
1cb3100d-2dc3-49bb-90c1-61f888263a38
Brackstone, Ken
33db3628-3171-4a7f-99cc-ad15db871fc5
Padhi, Bijaya Kumar
4a03b101-805e-4903-a847-e2c765f590c4
Heidler, Petra
ac96a23a-21c5-49fd-8274-cf0a4d3f6138

Marzo, Roy Rillera, Chakraborty, Ritankar, Yih Soh, Shean, Thew, Hui Zhu, Chong, Collins, Siau, Ching Sin, Wahab, Khairuddin Bin Abdul, Ariffin, Indang Ariati Binti, Chauhan, Shekhar, Brackstone, Ken, Padhi, Bijaya Kumar and Heidler, Petra (2023) Factors influencing parents’ hesitancy to vaccinate their children aged 5–11 years old against COVID-19: results from a cross-sectional study in Malaysia. Frontiers in Public Health, 11, [1091015]. (doi:10.3389/fpubh.2023.1091015).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: Vaccination programs have been rolled out across the globe to contain and mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 infection. Until recently, such programs were limited to adults and the older population, thereby limiting children from getting vaccinated. Recently, the Malaysian government rolled out vaccination for children aged 5–11 years. However, there are certain factors that might affect vaccination uptake among children. This study explores factors influencing parents’ hesitancy to vaccinate children in Malaysia. Method: A nationwide online cross-sectional convenience sampling survey from April 21, 2022 to June 3, 2022 was conducted. The study used descriptive statistics to inform about vaccine hesitancy among parents. Cross-tabulation was performed to calculate the frequency and percentage of vaccine hesitancy, quality of life, e-health literacy, and the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination among parents with children 5-11 years in Malaysia. Graphical methods were used to portray the levels of e-health literacy and levels of 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination. The study used both bi-variate and multivariate analysis to understand the relationship between vaccine hesitancy and the socio-demo-economic factors, quality of life, e-health literacy and 5C psychological antecedents. Results: Of 382 participants, almost one-third (33%) of participants reported vaccine hesitancy for their children. For 5C’s psychological antecedents of vaccination, around one quarter (26.96%) reported disagreement for confidence in vaccination, almost half (52.36%) reported disagreement for vaccination complacency, three-fifths (60.99%) reported vaccination constraint, one quarter (25.92%) reported calculation antecedent, and almost one-third reported disagreement over collective responsibility antecedent (25.92%). Chi-square test revealed that gender, employment status, and parents’ COVID-19 vaccination status were significantly associated (p<0.05) with vaccine hesitancy among parents. Assessing the influence of transactional e-health literacy, only the communication component contained a significant association (p<0.05). Among the 5C psychological antecedents, confidence, calculation, and collective responsibility were significantly associated (p<0.05) with vaccine hesitancy. Parents with secondary [OR: 8.80; CI: 2.44−31.79, (p<0.05)], post-secondary [OR: 5.21; CI: 2.10-13.41, (p<0.05)], and tertiary education [OR: 6.77; CI: 2.25−20.35, (p<0.05)] had significantly higher likelihood of vaccine hesitancy than those with primary education. Conclusion: Highly educated parents are more skeptical and are more likely to perceive the vaccine as unsafe and ineffective for their children. It is critical to disseminate the required information about the vaccine safety to the educated group.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 April 2023
Published date: 16 May 2023
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2023 Marzo, Chakraborty, Soh, Thew, Chong, Siau, Abdul Wahab, Binti Ariffin, Chauhan, Brackstone, Padhi and Heidler.
Keywords: children, COVID-19, health education and awareness, Malaysia, vaccine hesitancy

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477797
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477797
ISSN: 2296-2565
PURE UUID: a15372bd-f9bc-4519-9e2b-cd66edea1d3e
ORCID for Ken Brackstone: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6882-3260

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Date deposited: 14 Jun 2023 16:49
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:22

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Contributors

Author: Roy Rillera Marzo
Author: Ritankar Chakraborty
Author: Shean Yih Soh
Author: Hui Zhu Thew
Author: Collins Chong
Author: Ching Sin Siau
Author: Khairuddin Bin Abdul Wahab
Author: Indang Ariati Binti Ariffin
Author: Shekhar Chauhan
Author: Ken Brackstone ORCID iD
Author: Bijaya Kumar Padhi
Author: Petra Heidler

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