Abstract

Although the approved COVID-19 vaccine has been shown to be safe and effective, mass vaccination in Bangladeshi people remains a challenge. As a vaccination effort, the study provided an empirical evidence on willingness to vaccinate by sociodemographic, clinical and regional differences in Bangladeshi adults. This cross-sectional analysis from a household survey of 3646 adults aged 18 years or older was conducted in 8 districts of Bangladesh, from December 12, 2020, to January 7, 2021. Multinomial regression examined the impact of socio-demographic, clinical and healthcare-releated factors on hesitancy and reluctance of vaccination for COVID-19. Of the 3646 respondents (2212 men [60.7%]; mean [sd] age, 37.4 [13.9] years), 74.6% reported their willingness to vaccinate against COVID-19 when a safe and effective vaccine is available without a fee, while 8.5% were reluctant to vaccinate. With a minimum fee, 46.5% of the respondents showed intent to vaccinate. Among the respondents, 16.8% reported adequate adherence to health safety regulations, and 35.5% reported high confidence in the country's healthcare system. The COVID-19 vaccine refusal was significantly high in elderly, rural, semi-urban, and slum communities, farmers, day-laborers, homemakers, low-educated group, and those who had low confidence in the country's healthcare system. Also, the prevalence of vaccine hesitancy was high in the elderly population, low-educated group, day-laborers, people with chronic diseases, and people with low confidence in the country's healthcare system. A high prevalence of vaccine refusal and hesitancy was observed in rural people and slum dwellers in Bangladesh. The rural community and slum dwellers had a low literacy level, low adherence to health safety regulations and low confidence in healthcare system. The ongoing app-based registration for vaccination increased hesitancy and reluctancy in low-educated group. For rural, semi-urban, and slum people, outreach centers for vaccination can be established to ensure the vaccine's nearby availability and limit associated travel costs. In rural areas, community health workers, valued community-leaders, and non-governmental organizations can be utilized to motivate and educate people for vaccination against COVID-19. Further, emphasis should be given to the elderly and diseased people with tailored health messages and assurance from healthcare professionals. The media may play a responsible role with the vaccine education program and eliminate the social stigma about the vaccination. Finally, vaccination should be continued without a fee and thus Bangladesh's COVID vaccination program can become a model for other low and middle-income countries.

Highlights

  • Just a year after the virus was first detected in a Chinese city, the COVID-19 pandemic is an ongoing global threat that has infected over 100 million individuals and caused more than 2 million deaths [1]

  • Of the 3646 respondents (2212 men [60.7%]; mean [sd] age, 37.4 [13.9] years), 74.6% reported their willingness to vaccinate against COVID-19 when a safe and effective vaccine is available without a fee, while 8.5% were reluctant to vaccinate

  • The results suggest that rural people were 1.84 times more unwilling to get a COVID-19 vaccine than the city people (RRR = 1.84, 95% CI = 1.12–3.02)

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Summary

Introduction

Just a year after the virus was first detected in a Chinese city, the COVID-19 pandemic is an ongoing global threat that has infected over 100 million individuals and caused more than 2 million deaths [1]. Looking beyond phase 3 COVID-19 vaccine trials, the findings showed demonstrated effectiveness and a few vaccines have been approved by at least one national regulatory body across countries for mass deployment [2]. These are RNA vaccines (from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna), conventional inactivated vaccines (from Sinopharm, Bharat Biotech, and Sinovac), and viral vector vaccines (from Gamaleya Research Institute and OxfordAstraZeneca), which are being used in recent vaccination programs of many countries, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe, China, Russia, and India [2].

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