PLOS Global Public Health (Jan 2022)

The supply is there. So why can't pregnant and breastfeeding women in rural India get the COVID-19 vaccine?

  • Nadia G Diamond-Smith,
  • Preetika Sharma,
  • Mona Duggal,
  • Navneet Gill,
  • Jagriti Gupta,
  • Vijay Kumar,
  • Jasmeet Kaur,
  • Pushpendra Singh,
  • Katy Bradford Vosburg,
  • Alison M El Ayadi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001321
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 12
p. e0001321

Abstract

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Despite COVID-19 vaccines being available to pregnant women in India since summer 2021, little is known about vaccine uptake among this high need population. We conducted mixed methods research with pregnant and recently delivered rural women in northern India, consisting of 300 phone surveys and 15 in-depth interviews, in November 2021. Only about a third of respondents were vaccinated, however, about half of unvaccinated respondents reported that they would get vaccinated now if they could. Fears of harm to the unborn baby or young infant were common (22% of unvaccinated women). However, among unvaccinated women who wanted to get vaccinated, the most common barrier reported was that their health care provider refused to provide them the vaccine. Gender barriers and social norms also played a role, with family members restricting women's access. Trust in the health system was high, however, women were most often getting information about COVID-19 vaccines from sources that they did not trust, and they knew they were getting potentially poor-quality information. Qualitative data shed light on the barriers women faced from their family and health care providers but described how as more people got the vaccine that norms were changing. These findings highlight how pregnant women in India have lower vaccination rates than the general population, and while vaccine hesitancy does play a role, structural barriers from the health care system also limit access to vaccines. Interventions must be developed that target household decision-makers and health providers at the community level, and that take advantage of the trust that rural women already have in their health care providers and the government. It is essential to think beyond vaccine hesitancy and think at the system level when addressing this missed opportunity to vaccinate high risk pregnant women in this setting.