BMJ Open (Apr 2024)

COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in the general population and under-resourced communities from high-income countries: realist review

  • Nathalia Gonzalez-Jaramillo,
  • Annika Frahsa,
  • Dominik Abbühl,
  • Zayne Milena Roa-Díaz,
  • Cristopher Kobler-Betancourt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-084560
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4

Abstract

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Objective To compare vaccination willingness before rollout and 1 year post-rollout uptake among the general population and under-resourced communities in high-income countries.Design A realist review.Data sources Embase, PubMed, Dimensions ai and Google Scholar.Setting High-income countries.Definitions We defined vaccination willingness as the proportion of participants willing or intending to receive vaccines prior to availability. We defined vaccine uptake as the real proportion of the population with complete vaccination as reported by each country until November 2021.Results We included data from 62 studies and 18 high-income countries. For studies conducted among general populations, the proportion of vaccination willingness was 67% (95% CI 62% to 72%). In real-world settings, the overall proportion of vaccine uptake among those countries was 73% (95% CI 69% to 76%). 17 studies reported pre-rollout willingness for under-resourced communities. The summary proportion of vaccination willingness from studies reporting results among people from under-resourced communities was 52% (95% CI 0.46% to 0.57%). Real-world evidence about vaccine uptake after rollout among under-resourced communities was limited.Conclusion Our review emphasises the importance of realist reviews for assessing vaccine acceptance. Limited real-world evidence about vaccine uptake among under-resourced communities in high-income countries is a call to context-specific actions and reporting.