Towards a More Critical Public Health Understanding of Vaccine Hesitancy: Key Insights from a Decade of Research

Vaccine hesitancy has gained renewed attention as an important public health concern worldwide. Against this backdrop, over the last decade, we have conducted various qualitative, social science studies with the broad shared aim of better understanding this complex phenomenon. This has included various Cochrane systematic reviews of qualitative research globally, systematic reviews of qualitative research in Africa, and primary research studies in South Africa. These studies have also explored vaccine hesitancy for various vaccines, including routine childhood vaccination, HPV vaccination and other routine vaccinations for adolescents, and, most recently, COVID-19 vaccination. In this reflective and critical commentary piece we reflect on seven key overarching insights we feel we have gained about this complex phenomenon from the varying studies we have conducted over the past decade. These insights comprise the following: (1) the relationship between vaccine knowledge and hesitancy is complex and may operate in multiple directions; (2) vaccine hesitancy is driven by multiple socio-political forces; (3) vaccine hesitancy may be many things, rather than a single phenomenon; (4) vaccine hesitancy may be an ongoing ‘process’, rather than a fixed ‘stance’; (5) vaccine hesitancy may sometimes be about a ‘striving’, rather than a ‘resisting’; (6) ‘distrust’ as a driver of vaccine hesitancy needs to be better contextualized and disaggregated; and (7) the ‘demand-side’ versus ‘supply/access-side’ distinction of the drivers of suboptimal vaccination may be misleading and unhelpful. In unpacking these insights, we problematize some of the common assumptions within the vaccine hesitancy literature and flag topics that we think could benefit from further scrutiny and debate. Our hope is that this can provide a platform for further engagement on these issues and ultimately contribute towards fostering a more critical public health understanding of vaccine hesitancy.

[1]  C. Wiysonge,et al.  A Systematic Review of Factors That Influence Parents’ Views and Practices around Routine Childhood Vaccination in Africa: A Qualitative Evidence Synthesis , 2023, Vaccines.

[2]  M. Horowitz The Vaccine-Hesitant Moment , 2022, The New England journal of medicine.

[3]  P. Meskell,et al.  Adults' views and experiences of vaccines developed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative evidence synthesis , 2022, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.

[4]  H. Rooyen,et al.  Community-based Case Studies of Vaccine Hesitancy and the COVID-19 Response in South Africa; The VaxScenes Study , 2022, medRxiv.

[5]  C. Wiysonge,et al.  Factors that influence parents' and informal caregivers' views and practices regarding routine childhood vaccination: a qualitative evidence synthesis , 2021, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[6]  L. Low,et al.  COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy—A Scoping Review of Literature in High-Income Countries , 2021, Vaccines.

[7]  C. Wiysonge,et al.  Understanding COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy , 2021, Nature Medicine.

[8]  J. Jackson,et al.  Trust in science, social consensus and vaccine confidence , 2021, Nature Human Behaviour.

[9]  S. Cooper,et al.  Stakeholders’ Understandings of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccination in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Rapid Qualitative Systematic Review , 2021, Vaccines.

[10]  H. Larson,et al.  Vaccine safety in the next decade: why we need new modes of trust building , 2021, BMJ global health.

[11]  C. Wiysonge,et al.  Vaccine hesitancy in the era of COVID-19: could lessons from the past help in divining the future? , 2021, Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics.

[12]  B. Miller Science Denial and COVID Conspiracy Theories: Potential Neurological Mechanisms and Possible Responses. , 2020, JAMA.

[13]  Sara Cooper,et al.  Social media and HPV vaccination: Unsolicited public comments on a Facebook post by the Western Cape Department of Health provide insights into determinants of vaccine hesitancy in South Africa. , 2019, Vaccine.

[14]  C. Wiysonge,et al.  Factors that influence acceptance of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination for adolescents: a qualitative evidence synthesis , 2019, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.

[15]  H. Larson,et al.  Strategies to improve maternal vaccination acceptance , 2019, BMC Public Health.

[16]  Richard Turner Measles vaccination: A matter of confidence and commitment , 2019, PLoS Medicine.

[17]  A. Wiyeh,et al.  Knowledge advances and gaps on the demand side of vaccination. , 2019, The Lancet. Infectious diseases.

[18]  H. Larson The state of vaccine confidence , 2018, The Lancet.

[19]  G. Vallée-Tourangeau,et al.  Strategies to increase vaccine acceptance and uptake: From behavioral insights to context-specific, culturally-appropriate, evidence-based communications and interventions. , 2018, Vaccine.

[20]  C. Betsch,et al.  Beyond confidence: Development of a measure assessing the 5C psychological antecedents of vaccination , 2018, PloS one.

[21]  C. Wiysonge,et al.  Vaccine hesitancy – a potential threat to the achievements of vaccination programmes in Africa , 2018, Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics.

[22]  R. Getman,et al.  Calling the Shots: Why Parents Reject Vaccines , 2017 .

[23]  J. Leask,et al.  Understanding the perceived logic of care by vaccine-hesitant and vaccine-refusing parents: A qualitative study in Australia , 2017, PloS one.

[24]  È. Dubé,et al.  Vaccination resilience: Building and sustaining confidence in and demand for vaccination. , 2017, Vaccine.

[25]  N. MacDonald,et al.  Efforts to monitor Global progress on individual and community demand for immunization: Development of definitions and indicators for the Global Vaccine Action Plan Strategic Objective 2. , 2017, Vaccine.

[26]  E. Sobo,et al.  Framing Childhood Vaccination in the United States: Getting Past Polarization in the Public Discourse , 2017 .

[27]  E. Sobo THEORIZING (VACCINE) REFUSAL: Through the Looking Glass , 2016 .

[28]  N. Turner Meeting of the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on immunization, October 2014 – conclusions and recommendations. , 2015, Releve epidemiologique hebdomadaire.

[29]  N. V. A. Committee Assessing the State of Vaccine Confidence in the United States: Recommendations from the National Vaccine Advisory Committee , 2015 .

[30]  N. MacDonald Vaccine hesitancy: Definition, scope and determinants. , 2015, Vaccine.

[31]  R. Obregon,et al.  Vaccine Special Issue on Vaccine Hesitancy. , 2015, Vaccine.

[32]  J. Eskola,et al.  Review of vaccine hesitancy: Rationale, remit and methods. , 2015, Vaccine.

[33]  È. Dubé,et al.  Vaccine hesitancy, vaccine refusal and the anti-vaccine movement: influence, impact and implications , 2015, Expert review of vaccines.

[34]  Heidi J Larson,et al.  Understanding vaccine hesitancy around vaccines and vaccination from a global perspective: a systematic review of published literature, 2007-2012. , 2014, Vaccine.

[35]  S. Madhi,et al.  Advances in childhood immunisation in South Africa: where to now? Programme managers’ views and evidence from systematic reviews , 2012, BMC Public Health.

[36]  Catherine M. Jones,et al.  'Communicate to vaccinate' (COMMVAC). building evidence for improving communication about childhood vaccinations in low- and middle-income countries: protocol for a programme of research , 2011 .

[37]  R. Rappuoli,et al.  A Crisis of Public Confidence in Vaccines , 2010, Science Translational Medicine.

[38]  C. Wiysonge,et al.  Knowledge and attitudes towards vaccines and immunization among adolescents in South Africa , 2010, Human vaccines.

[39]  T. P. Weber Vaccine anxieties: global science, child health and society , 2008 .

[40]  J. Cassell,et al.  'MMR talk' and vaccination choices: an ethnographic study in Brighton. , 2005, Social science & medicine.

[41]  M. Davies,et al.  UNICEF , 1949, Social Service Review.

[42]  B. Gellin,et al.  Assessing the State of Vaccine Confidence in the United States: Recommendations from the National Vaccine Advisory Committee: Approved by the National Vaccine Advisory Committee on June 9, 2015 [corrected]. , 2015, Public health reports.

[43]  D. Rudman,et al.  Risk, responsibility, resistance: Young women’s negotiations of identity and healthy citizenship in human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination narratives , 2014 .

[44]  Martina Mueller,et al.  STRATEGIES TO INCREASE , 2013 .

[45]  S. Ratzan,et al.  New Decade of Vaccines 5 Addressing the vaccine confi dence gap , 2011 .

[46]  R. Wittern-Sterzel ["Politics is nothing else than large scale medicine"--Rudolf Virchow and his role in the development of social medicine]. , 2003, Verhandlungen der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Pathologie.