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The Drum Beat 769 - Vaccine Hesitancy in the Polio Context

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Issue #
769
The Drum BeatVaccine Hesitancy in the Polio Context - The Drum Beat 769
January 23, 2019
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In this issue:
* UNDERSTANDING AND MEASURING VH
* EXACERBATING FACTORS
* STRATEGIES FOR ADDRESSING VH
* WINDOW ON A FEW SPECIFIC VH GEOGRAPHIES
* PLEASE LEND YOUR VOICE TO THE CI SURVEY
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Understanding vaccine hesitancy (VH), leading in some cases to refusal, is vital to the success of Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), as well as to further expansion of routine immunisation. GPEI partner the World Health Organization (WHO), via its Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on Immunization, has called for improved monitoring of vaccine confidence. The top 3 reasons for VH across all WHO regions, 2014-2016, were: risk-benefit (scientific evidence); lack of knowledge and awareness of vaccination and its importance; and religion, culture, gender, and socioeconomic issues. Clearly, communication is at the heart of any effort to understand and address VH - a complex and context-specific phenomenon - which is reflected in the nearly 200 summaries on The CI's polio theme site on the topic. This Drum Beat offers just a small fraction of what we have to offer, with a focus on hesitancy around the oral polio vaccine (OPV).

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From The Communication Initiative Network - where communication and media are central to social and economic development.
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UNDERSTANDING AND MEASURING VH
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EXACERBATING FACTORS
  • 5.Public Trust in Vaccination: An Analytical Framework
    by Vijayaprasad GopichandranWith a focus on the Indian context, this paper develops an analytical framework to assess trust in vaccination and addresses specific issues pertaining to mistrust in vaccination. "In certain districts of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, there was serious resistance to the polio vaccination due to widespread misinformation among the minority communities that it was a western ploy to sterilise the minority populations and thus reduce their numbers....A deeper analysis...revealed that...the community was tired of the repeated rounds of the pulse polio campaign, which had led to suspicions, and the minority community was even less amenable to vaccination because the complete apathy of the mainstream health system towards their other healthcare needs had left them feeling marginalised and oppressed....This highlights how trust in vaccination is strongly influenced by trust in the health system and the social, historical and political context." It is argued that active community engagement with respect to vaccination policies is one of the key measures for ensuring that the vaccination policy and health system are viewed as trustworthy. [April-June 2017]
     
  • 6.Science and Politics in the Polio Vaccination Debate on Facebook: A Mixed-Methods Approach to Public Engagement in a Science-Based Dialogue
    by Daniela OrrIn the context of this study on public engagement with the 2013 polio crisis in Israel in a social media environment, the researchers point out that the vast majority of the public are not biologists or epidemiologists, and they thus need to trust the sources that deliver the information to them and act upon guidance from these sources. This opens the door to political considerations and evaluations of the sources who deliver the information. The researchers consider "political" anything that involves power relations, including dialogue and public engagement in the scientific realm. They characterise mainstream media and social media as "among the most important and powerful agents that mediate between science and the public". [Mar 2018]
     
  • 7.Media Representation of Vaccine Side Effects and Its Impact on Utilization of Vaccination Services in Vietnam
    by Bach Xuan Tran, Victoria L Boggiano, Long Hoang Nguyen, Carl A Latkin, Huong Lan Thi Nguyen, Tung Thanh Tran, Huong Thi Le, Thuc Thi Minh Vu, Cyrus SH Ho and Roger CM HoVietnam's vaccine-related milestones include becoming polio free in 2000. However, there have been examples in which reports in the media of adverse effects following immunisations (AEFIs) have threatened these successes. For instance, in 2013, a few AEFIs were reported after infants received the Quinvaxem vaccine, which triggered controversies in many print and internet-based Vietnamese newspapers. A total of 68.2% of subjects hesitated to receive vaccines after hearing about AEFIs in the media, and 12.4% subjects would refuse vaccination altogether after hearing about AEFIs. Receiving information from community health workers and their relatives, colleagues, and friends was negatively associated with VH, but facilitated vaccine refusal after reading about AEFIs in the media. [Sep 2018]
     
  • See also:
    * Sentiment, Contents, and Retweets: A Study of Two Vaccine-Related Twitter Datasets
    * Misinformation Lingers in Memory: Failure of Three Pro-Vaccination Strategies
    * Silent refusals and distrust of vaccines is a big challenge for vaccination teams
    * Vaccine Hesitancy: Towards a Better Understanding of Drivers and Barriers to Awareness, Acceptance and Activation
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WINDOW ON A FEW SPECIFIC VH GEOGRAPHIES
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STRATEGIES FOR ADDRESSING VH
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This issue of The Drum Beat was written by Kier Olsen DeVries.
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The Drum Beat is the email and web network of The Communication Initiative Partnership.

Full list of the CI Partners:
ANDI, BBC Media Action, Bernard van Leer Foundation, Breakthrough, Citurna TV, Fundación Imaginario, Fundación Nuevo Periodismo Iberoamericano (FNPI),Heartlines, Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs, Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP), MISA, Open Society Foundations, Oxfam Novib, PAHO, The Panos Institute, Puntos de Encuentro, SAfAIDS, Sesame Workshop, Soul City, STEPS International, UNAIDS, UNICEF, Universidad de los Andes, World Health Organization (WHO), W.K. Kellogg Foundation

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Chair of the Partners Group: Garth Japhet, Founder, Soul City garth@heartlines.org.za

Executive Director: Warren Feek wfeek@comminit.com
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The Editor of The Drum Beat is Kier Olsen DeVries.
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