The State of Vaccine Confidence 2016: Global Insights Through a 67-Country Survey
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine · Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation · +11 more institutions
Abstract
Public trust in immunization is an increasingly important global health issue. Losses in confidence in vaccines and immunization programmes can lead to vaccine reluctance and refusal, risking disease outbreaks and challenging immunization goals in high- and low-income settings. National and international immunization stakeholders have called for better monitoring of vaccine confidence to identify emerging concerns before they evolve into vaccine confidence crises.
We perform a large-scale, data-driven study on worldwide attitudes to immunizations. This survey - which we believe represents the largest survey on confidence in immunization to date - examines perceptions of vaccine importance, safety, effectiveness, and religious compatibility among 65,819 individuals across 67 countries. Hierarchical models are employed to probe relationships between individual- and country-level socio-economic factors and vaccine attitudes obtained through the four-question, Likert-scale survey.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 96.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Authors
8- HJHeidi J. LarsonCorresponding
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington
- ADAlexandre de Figueiredo
Imperial College London
- XZXiahong Zhao
National University Health System, National University of Singapore
- WSW Schulz
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
- PVPierre Verger
French Clinical Research Infrastructure Network, ARPE PACA, Aix-Marseille Université, Inserm, Economic & Social Sciences, Health Systems & Medical Informatics, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
Topics & keywords
- Vaccination
- Immunization
- Global health
- Medicine
- Likert scale
- Public health
- Confidence interval
- Scale (ratio)