A Systematic Review of Population-Based Studies Assessing Knowledge, Attitudes, Acceptance, and Hesitancy of Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women towards the COVID-19 Vaccine
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy and Data Source
2.2. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Selection Process
2.4. Data Extraction
2.5. Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Literature Search
3.2. Main Characteristics of Included Studies and Quality Assessment
3.3. Quality Assessment
3.4. Characteristics of the Studied Population
3.5. Attitude toward COVID-19 Vaccine
3.5.1. Sociodemographic Factors and Attitude toward COVID-19 Vaccine
3.5.2. Gestational Characteristics and Attitude toward COVID-19 Vaccine
3.5.3. Previous Vaccination Behavior and Attitude toward COVID-19 Vaccine
3.5.4. COVID-19 Related Aspects and Attitude toward COVID-19 Vaccine
3.5.5. Attitude toward COVID-19 Booster Doses
3.6. COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance
3.7. COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy
3.8. Fear Related to COVID-19 Vaccination
3.9. Level of Knowledge on COVID-19 Vaccine
4. Discussion
4.1. Implications for Policies and Practice
4.2. Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Search Strategy | Details |
---|---|
Search query | P: pregnant or breast-feeding women (and synonyms); E: COVID-19 vaccination (andsynonyms); O: knowledge, attitude, and practice (including factors associated with acceptance/hesitancy) regarding the COVID-19 vaccination (and synonyms). |
Inclusion criteria | P: pregnant or breastfeeding women E: COVID-19 vaccination O: attitudes, acceptance, hesitancy, fear, knowledge S: original, observational study (including cross-sectional, case-control, or cohort both prospective and retrospective studies), published as peer-reviewed articles in international scientific journals |
Exclusion criteria | P: studies not performed among humans or that were conducted on a different population as women in general, parents or only mothers of children older than one year, and children’s caregivers in general E: other than COVID-19 vaccination O: combining data with different and multiple outcomes, or assessing different outcomes not listed in our inclusion criteria (for instance, vaccine efficacy/safety/development or collecting serological/immunological data), and articles assessing acceptance/hesitancy/refusal against vaccines other than COVID-19 S: not original (reviews with or without meta-analysis), not performed among humans, not observational (as for instance trials), not published as peer-reviewed articles in international scientific journals (book, book chapter, thesis), no full-text papers (abstract, conference paper, letter, commentary, note) |
Language | English |
Time filter | After 2019 |
Databases searched | PubMed/MEDLINE, ExcerptaMedica Database (EMBASE) and Scopus |
Search date | January 2023 |
Author, Year [Ref.] | Study Period | Study Design | Country | Study Setting | Recruitment Methods | Administration Method | Funds | CoI | QS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abuhammad, 2022 [19] | September–October 2021 | Cross-sectional | Jordan | nation-wide | social media, midwives, and gynecologists | self-administered | no | no | low |
Asratie, 2022 [20] | December–February 2021 | Cross-sectional | Ethiopia | community-based (Motta town and Hulet Eji Enese district) | n.a. | face-to-face | n.a. | no | moderate |
Ceulemans, 2021 [21] | April–July 2020 | Cross-sectional | BE, CH, IE, NL, NO, UK | multinational (6 European countries) | social media and websites dedicated to pregnant women | self-administered | yes | no | moderate |
Ghamri, 2022 [22] | July–September 2021 | Cross-sectional | Saudi-Arabia | nation-wide | social media | self-administered | n.a. | no | low |
Janik, 2022 [23] | February–April 2022 | Cross-sectional | Poland | nation-wide | social media dedicated to pregnant women | self-administered | yes | no | low |
Jones, 2022 [24] | May–June 2021 | Cross-sectional | USA | nation-wide | social media dedicated to pregnant women | self-administered | no | no | low |
Mattocks, 2022 [25] | January–May 2021 | Cross-sectional | USA | pregnant and postpartum veterans enrolled in VA care | mailed invitation followed by research telephone calls | telephone surveys (~45 min in length) | yes | no | high |
Mhereeg, 2022 [26] | November 2021–March 2022 | Mixed-method: cohort study (Databank) and cross-sectional | UK (Wales) | Born-In-Wales Birth Cohort | social media, and through midwives, and posters in hospitals | self-administered | yes | no | low |
Mohan, 2021 [27] | October–November 2020 | Cross-sectional | Qatar | nation-wide | HMC social media platforms | self-administered | no | no | low |
Obasanya, 2022 [28] | April–June 2020 | Cross-sectional | USA | nation-wide | Prolifc Academic | self-administered | yes | no | moderate |
Preis, 2022 [29] | December 2020 | Cross-sectional | USA | nation-wide | social media | self-administered | n.a | n.a. | moderate |
Ramlawi, 2022 [30] | March–August 2021 | Cross-sectional | Canada | nation-wide | Canadian social media accounts | self-administered | yes | no | moderate |
Razzaghi, Yankey, 2022 [31] | April–November 2021 | Cross-sectional | USA | nation-wide | NIS random-digit-dialing sample of cellular telephone numbers | household telephone survey | yes | no | moderate |
Razzaghi, Kahn, 2022 [32] | March–April 2021 | Cross-sectional | USA | nation-wide | internet panel operated by Dynata | self-administered | no | no | moderate |
Schaal, 2022 [33] | March–April 2021 | Cross-sectional | Germany | nation-wide | online platform | self-administered | yes | no | low |
Sezerol, 2023 [34] | March–April 2022 | Cross-sectional | Turkey | District Health Directorate in Sultanbeyli, district of Istanbul | telephone | via telephone | no | no | low |
Simmons, 2022 [35] | December 2020–January 2021 | Cross-sectional | USA (California) | nation-wide | StudyPages | self-administered | yes | no | moderate |
Skirrow, 2022 [36] | August–October 2020 | Cross-sectional | UK | nation-wide | social media, and telephone or Microsoft Teams interview | self-administered | yes | no | low |
Stuckelberger, 2021 [37] | June–July 2020 | Cross-sectional | Switzerland | European multi-centers | websites, forums, and social media | self-administered | no | no | low |
Taybeh, 2022 [38] | November 2021–January 2022 | Cross-sectional | Jordan | nation-wide | social media not otherwise specified | self-administered | no | no | low |
Wang, 2022 [39] | September–December 2021 | Cross-sectional | China | sub-national (southern China) | WeChat groups | self-administered | yes | no | moderate |
Author, Year [Ref.] | Type of Population | Age in Years | Sample Size | Study Completion Rate |
---|---|---|---|---|
Abuhammad, 2022 [19] | pregnant and lactating | 18–55 | 414 (pregnant 195, lactating 218) | 82% |
Asratie, 2022 [20] | pregnant | 31.2 ± 5.76 | 851 | n.a. |
Ceulemans, 2021 [21] | pregnant and breastfeeding women up to three months postpartum | n.a. | 16,063 (6661 pregnant, 9402 breastfeeding) | n.a. |
Ghamri, 2022 [22] | pregnant | 31.57 ± 7.79 | 5307 | n.a. |
Janik, K., 2022 [23] | pregnant | 19–42 | 288 | 100% |
Jones, 2022 [24] | pregnant and within six-months postpartum | 29.61 (±3.89) | 227 | n.a. |
Mattocks, 2022 [25] | pregnant | 35.9 ± 2.7 | 72 | 71.3% |
Mhereeg, 2022 [26] | pregnant | 18–50 | 25,111 | 88.6% |
Mohan, 2021 [27] | pregnant and lactating | 18–46 | 341 | n.a. |
Obasanya, 2022 [28] | pregnant and post-partum | 18–49 | 489 | n.a. |
Preis, 2022 [29] | pregnant | 31.24 ± 4.24 | 1899 | 63% |
Ramlawi, 2022 [30] | pregnant and lactating | 30–39 | 3446 | 93.4% |
Razzaghi, Yankey, 2022 [31] | pregnant and breastfeeding | 18–49 | 7173 (3433 pregnant, 3740 breastfeeding) | n.a. |
Razzaghi, Kahn, 2022 [32] | pregnant | 18–49 | 1516 | 91.2% |
Schaal, 2022 [33] | pregnant and breastfeeding | pregnant 31.8 ± 4.3 breastfeeding 32.4 ± 4.4 | 2339 women (1043 pregnant, 1296 breastfeeding) | n.a. |
Sezerol, 2023 [34] | pregnant | 28.07 ± 5.03 | 561 | n.a. |
Simmons, 2022 [35] | pregnant | 18–45 | 387 | 86.2% |
Skirrow, 2022 [36] | pregnant, breastfeeding | 30–34 | 1181 | 77.4% |
Stuckelberger, 2021 [37] | pregnant and breastfeeding | 33 | 1551 (515 pregnant, 1036 breastfeeding) | 75.1% |
Taybeh, 2022 [38] | pregnant and lactating | 29.7 | 584 | n.a. |
Wang, 2022 [39] | lactating | 30.9 ± 4.8 | 432 | 85.4% |
Topic | N of Ref | Author, Year [Ref] |
---|---|---|
Attitude | 8 | Abuhammad, 2022 [21]; Asratie, 2022 [22]; Ceulemans, 2021 [23]; Ghamri, 2022 [24]; Obasanya, 2022 [30]; Razzaghi, Yankey, 2022 [33]; Skirrow, 2022 [38]; Stuckelberger, 2021 [39] |
Attitude toward COVID-19 booster doses | 2 | Taybeh, 2022 [40]; Wang, 2022 [41] |
Acceptance | 9 | Janik, K, 2022 [25]; Jones, 2022 [26] Mattocks, 2022 [27]; Mhereeg, 2022 [28]; Preis, 2022 [31]; Ramlawi, 2022 [32]; Razzaghi, Yankey, 2022 [33]; Razzaghi, Kahn, 2022 [34]; Wang, 2022 [41] |
Hesitancy | 5 | Mohan, 2021 [29]; Razzaghi, Kahn, 2022 [34]; Schaal, 2022 [35]; Sezerol, 2023 [36]; Simmons, 2022 [37] |
Fear | 7 | Abuhammad, 2022 [21]; Asratie, 2022 [22]; Janik, K., 2022 [25]; Mattocks, 2022 [27]; Sezerol, 2023 [36]; Skirrow, 2022 [38]; Wang, 2022 [41] |
Knowledge | 3 | Asratie, 2022 [22]; Mattocks, 2022 [27]; Wang, 2022 [41] |
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Gianfredi, V.; Stefanizzi, P.; Berti, A.; D’Amico, M.; De Lorenzo, V.; Lorenzo, A.D.; Moscara, L.; Castaldi, S. A Systematic Review of Population-Based Studies Assessing Knowledge, Attitudes, Acceptance, and Hesitancy of Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women towards the COVID-19 Vaccine. Vaccines 2023, 11, 1289. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11081289
Gianfredi V, Stefanizzi P, Berti A, D’Amico M, De Lorenzo V, Lorenzo AD, Moscara L, Castaldi S. A Systematic Review of Population-Based Studies Assessing Knowledge, Attitudes, Acceptance, and Hesitancy of Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women towards the COVID-19 Vaccine. Vaccines. 2023; 11(8):1289. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11081289
Chicago/Turabian StyleGianfredi, Vincenza, Pasquale Stefanizzi, Alessandro Berti, Marilena D’Amico, Viola De Lorenzo, Antonio Di Lorenzo, Lorenza Moscara, and Silvana Castaldi. 2023. "A Systematic Review of Population-Based Studies Assessing Knowledge, Attitudes, Acceptance, and Hesitancy of Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women towards the COVID-19 Vaccine" Vaccines 11, no. 8: 1289. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11081289
APA StyleGianfredi, V., Stefanizzi, P., Berti, A., D’Amico, M., De Lorenzo, V., Lorenzo, A. D., Moscara, L., & Castaldi, S. (2023). A Systematic Review of Population-Based Studies Assessing Knowledge, Attitudes, Acceptance, and Hesitancy of Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women towards the COVID-19 Vaccine. Vaccines, 11(8), 1289. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11081289