Vaccine
Volume 32, Issue 14, Pages 1523-1640 (20 March 2014)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X/32
Available online 2 March 2014
Review
Understanding vaccine hesitancy around vaccines and vaccination from a global perspective: A systematic review of published literature, 2007–2012
Heidi J. Larson, Caitlin Jarrett, Elisabeth Eckersberger, David M.D. Smith, Pauline Paterson
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264410X14001443
Highlights
:: Vaccine hesitancy is a complex issue driven by a variety of context-specific factors.
:: Most studies were conducted in Europe and the Americas, with a two-fold increase in research on this topic during the period 2007–2012.
:: Determinants examined are mostly from classic models (e.g., Health Belief Model) which do not adequately account for contextual influences.
Abstract
Vaccine “hesitancy” is an emerging term in the literature and discourse on vaccine decision-making and determinants of vaccine acceptance. It recognizes a continuum between the domains of vaccine acceptance and vaccine refusal and de-polarizes previous characterization of individuals and groups as either anti-vaccine or pro-vaccine.
The primary aims of this systematic review are to: 1) identify research on vaccine hesitancy; 2) identify determinants of vaccine hesitancy in different settings including its context-specific causes, its expression and its impact; and 3) inform the development of a model for assessing determinants of vaccine hesitancy in different settings as proposed by the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts Working Group (SAGE WG) for dealing with vaccine hesitancy.
A broad search strategy, built to capture multiple dimensions of public trust, confidence and hesitancy around vaccines, was applied across multiple databases. Peer-reviewed studies were selected for inclusion if they focused on childhood vaccines [≤7 years of age], used multivariate analyses, and were published between January 2007 and November 2012.
Our results show a variety of factors as being associated with vaccine hesitancy but they do not allow for a complete classification and confirmation of their independent and relative strength of influence. Determinants of vaccine hesitancy are complex and context-specific – varying across time, place and vaccines.