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Prevalence and Potential Determinants of COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy and Resistance in Qatar

Authors :
Mohamed H. Al-Thani
Aisha Mohammed Al-Hamadi
Lina Bader
Peter Haddad
Majid Alabdulla
Tarek Bellaj
Salma M. Khaled
Catalina Petcu
Iman Amro
Marwa Al-Assi
Abdoulaye Diop
Amal Aawadalla Mohamed Ali
Peter W.R. Woodruff
Kien Le Trung
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Qatar University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Global COVID-19 pandemic containment necessitates understanding the risk of hesitance or resistance to vaccine uptake in different populations. The Middle East and North Africa currently lack vital representative vaccine hesitancy data. We conducted the first representative national phone survey among the adult population of Qatar, between December 2020 and January 2021, to estimate the prevalence and identify potential determinants of vaccine willingness: acceptance (strongly agree), resistance (strongly disagree), and hesitance (somewhat agree, neutral, somewhat disagree). Bivariate and multinomial logistic regression models estimated associations between willingness groups and fifteen variables. In the total sample, 42.7% (95% CI: 39.5–46.1) were accepting, 45.2% (95% CI: 41.9–48.4) hesitant, and 12.1% (95% CI: 10.1–14.4) resistant. Vaccine resistant compared with hesistant and accepting groups reported no endorsement source will increase vaccine confidence (58.9% vs. 5.6% vs. 0.2%, respectively). Female gender, Arab ethnicity, migrant status/type, and vaccine side-effects concerns were associated with hesitancy and resistance. COVID-19 related bereavement, infection, and quarantine status were not significantly associated with any willingness group. Absence of or lack of concern about contracting the virus was solely associated with resistance. COVID-19 vaccine resistance, hesitance, and side-effects concerns are high in Qatar’s population compared with those globally. Urgent public health engagement should focus on women, Qataris (non-migrants), and Arab ethnicity.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....301696fb4b5f5934d37ca31455cfae06