Asset Details
MbrlCatalogueTitleDetail
Do you wish to reserve the book?
Barriers and drivers of positive COVID-19 vaccination behaviours among healthcare workers in Europe and Central Asia: a qualitative cross-country synthesis
by
Jackson, Cath
, Isahakyan, Shushanik
, Nielsen, Siff Malue
, Hajiyev, Jeyhun
, Warsi, Sahil
, Ilves, Anna
, Săndulescu, Anca-Irina
, Aghasaryan, Anastas
, Yusifli, Elvin
, Oona, Marje
, Hovhannisyan, Lusine
, Zamfirescu, Raisa-Gabriela
, Cilović-Lagarija, Šeila
, Andreasyan, Diana
, Jusupov, Nursultan
, Kjosevska, Elena
, Bogdan, Ignat V.
, Kachkachishvili, Iago
, Vasilevska, Ana
, Craig, Brett
, Colonescu, Silviu
, Aregay, Aron Kassahun
, Šabanović, Haris
, Isahakyan, Anna
, Păunescu, Bogdan
, Chistyakova, Darya P.
, Smith, Sian
, Habersaat, Katrine Bach
, Kender, Elisa
, Mazhnaia, Alyona
in
Behavior
/ Burnout
/ Communication skills training
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 vaccines
/ Decision making
/ Family roles
/ Health care
/ Immunization
/ Intervention
/ Mass media
/ Mass media effects
/ Medical personnel
/ Mental health
/ Mental health services
/ Motivation
/ Nurses
/ Pandemics
/ Public health
/ Qualitative research
/ Skill development
/ Social development
/ Social factors
/ Social motivation
/ Teamwork
/ Uptake
/ Workers
/ Workloads
2023
Hey, we have placed the reservation for you!
By the way, why not check out events that you can attend while you pick your title.
You are currently in the queue to collect this book. You will be notified once it is your turn to collect the book.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Looks like we were not able to place the reservation. Kindly try again later.
Are you sure you want to remove the book from the shelf?
Barriers and drivers of positive COVID-19 vaccination behaviours among healthcare workers in Europe and Central Asia: a qualitative cross-country synthesis
by
Jackson, Cath
, Isahakyan, Shushanik
, Nielsen, Siff Malue
, Hajiyev, Jeyhun
, Warsi, Sahil
, Ilves, Anna
, Săndulescu, Anca-Irina
, Aghasaryan, Anastas
, Yusifli, Elvin
, Oona, Marje
, Hovhannisyan, Lusine
, Zamfirescu, Raisa-Gabriela
, Cilović-Lagarija, Šeila
, Andreasyan, Diana
, Jusupov, Nursultan
, Kjosevska, Elena
, Bogdan, Ignat V.
, Kachkachishvili, Iago
, Vasilevska, Ana
, Craig, Brett
, Colonescu, Silviu
, Aregay, Aron Kassahun
, Šabanović, Haris
, Isahakyan, Anna
, Păunescu, Bogdan
, Chistyakova, Darya P.
, Smith, Sian
, Habersaat, Katrine Bach
, Kender, Elisa
, Mazhnaia, Alyona
in
Behavior
/ Burnout
/ Communication skills training
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 vaccines
/ Decision making
/ Family roles
/ Health care
/ Immunization
/ Intervention
/ Mass media
/ Mass media effects
/ Medical personnel
/ Mental health
/ Mental health services
/ Motivation
/ Nurses
/ Pandemics
/ Public health
/ Qualitative research
/ Skill development
/ Social development
/ Social factors
/ Social motivation
/ Teamwork
/ Uptake
/ Workers
/ Workloads
2023
Oops! Something went wrong.
While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Barriers and drivers of positive COVID-19 vaccination behaviours among healthcare workers in Europe and Central Asia: a qualitative cross-country synthesis
by
Jackson, Cath
, Isahakyan, Shushanik
, Nielsen, Siff Malue
, Hajiyev, Jeyhun
, Warsi, Sahil
, Ilves, Anna
, Săndulescu, Anca-Irina
, Aghasaryan, Anastas
, Yusifli, Elvin
, Oona, Marje
, Hovhannisyan, Lusine
, Zamfirescu, Raisa-Gabriela
, Cilović-Lagarija, Šeila
, Andreasyan, Diana
, Jusupov, Nursultan
, Kjosevska, Elena
, Bogdan, Ignat V.
, Kachkachishvili, Iago
, Vasilevska, Ana
, Craig, Brett
, Colonescu, Silviu
, Aregay, Aron Kassahun
, Šabanović, Haris
, Isahakyan, Anna
, Păunescu, Bogdan
, Chistyakova, Darya P.
, Smith, Sian
, Habersaat, Katrine Bach
, Kender, Elisa
, Mazhnaia, Alyona
in
Behavior
/ Burnout
/ Communication skills training
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 vaccines
/ Decision making
/ Family roles
/ Health care
/ Immunization
/ Intervention
/ Mass media
/ Mass media effects
/ Medical personnel
/ Mental health
/ Mental health services
/ Motivation
/ Nurses
/ Pandemics
/ Public health
/ Qualitative research
/ Skill development
/ Social development
/ Social factors
/ Social motivation
/ Teamwork
/ Uptake
/ Workers
/ Workloads
2023
Please be aware that the book you have requested cannot be checked out. If you would like to checkout this book, you can reserve another copy
We have requested the book for you!
Your request is successful and it will be processed during the Library working hours. Please check the status of your request in My Requests.
Oops! Something went wrong.
Looks like we were not able to place your request. Kindly try again later.
Barriers and drivers of positive COVID-19 vaccination behaviours among healthcare workers in Europe and Central Asia: a qualitative cross-country synthesis
Journal Article
Barriers and drivers of positive COVID-19 vaccination behaviours among healthcare workers in Europe and Central Asia: a qualitative cross-country synthesis
2023
Request Book From Autostore
and Choose the Collection Method
Overview
Vaccination uptake is essential to controlling the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Healthcare workers (HCWs) play a critical role in receiving, recommending and delivering COVID-19 vaccination. Understanding the specific influences on each behaviour enables the development of targeted and tailored interventions to improve vaccination uptake. This paper presents a qualitative synthesis of HCWs’ individual and context barriers and drivers to these three vaccination behaviours across 10 countries in Europe and Central Asia. Qualitative data from interviews and focus group discussions with 378 HCWs between December 2020 and March 2022 were synthesised and organised by four COM (capability, physical and social opportunity, motivation) factors. Differences by stage of COVID-19 vaccine roll-out (in preparation, early and late delivery) were explored.
Receiving vaccination
related to all four factors.
Recommending vaccination
mostly related to capability and motivation. HCWs were generally well-informed by official sources and viewed vaccination as the way to end the pandemic, acknowledging their important role in this. Colleagues, family and friends were positive influences on personal vaccination decisions. However, knowledge gaps were evident, particularly amongst nurses who relied on (social) media. Concerns about safety and effectiveness, often connected to knowledge gaps, were heightened by the accelerated timeline for COVID-19 vaccine development and approval. This impeded some HCWs’ motivation to receive and recommend vaccination even in the later roll-out countries.
Delivering vaccination
was facilitated by support from public health organisations, teamwork and service re-organisation, more evident amongst later roll-out countries. Ongoing high workloads, stress and burnout hindered delivery. Complex and inter-related factors affecting HCWs’ vaccination behaviours were identified. These insights should inform the design of multifaceted interventions (e.g., communication skills training, management support for HCWs’ mental health, and engaging them in decision-making for service redesign); not only for COVID-19 vaccination as it is integrated into routine services but for routine immunization as a whole.
This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.