Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.)

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Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) Indexed in Scopus since 2022
CiteScore 1.0
Indexed since 2022
First decision 7 Days
Submission to acceptance 45 Days
Acceptance to publication 14 Days
Acceptance rate 8%

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Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) Open directory record
Original full research article

COVID-19 vaccination coverage among female healthcare workers: a look at the gender gap

Published
2023-02-08
Pages
367 - 378
Full text

Keywords

  • Attitudes
  • Coverage;
  • COVID-19;
  • Vaccination
  • Gender;
  • workers;
  • Healthcare

Abstract

The COVID-19 vaccine coverage has been shown to differ by gender, with females being more hesitant to vaccinate, even among healthcare workers. This study aimed to assess female healthcare workers' COVID-19 vaccination coverage and anti-vaccination attitudes. We conducted a cross-sectional study using an online questionnaire. We included healthcare workers from various professions and examined their sociodemographic characteristics and anti-vaccination attitudes using the Vaccination Attitudes Examination Scale and COVID-19 vaccination coverage. In addition, we assessed factors associated with coverage using multivariable analysis. Female healthcare workers had significantly lower vaccine coverage [59.6% (95%CI: 55.5%-63.7%)] than males [74.9% (95%CI: 70.7-78.8%)]. In addition, they have significantly higher anti-vaccination attitudes and lower perceived vaccine knowledge. Vaccine coverage is age-related in female healthcare workers, with 52.7% in the less than 30-year age group and 70.7% in the ≥50-year age group. The age group 40-49 and middle-income category are positively associated with vaccination coverage among female healthcare workers. In contrast, living with a child, having a history of COVID-19 infection, mistrust of vaccine benefits, and worries about unforeseen effects are all associated with lower coverage. In conclusion, female healthcare workers have significantly lower vaccine coverage, especially for the younger age groups, associated with mistrust of vaccine benefits and worries about unforeseen effects. These findings highlight the importance of addressing vaccine hesitancy among female HCWs as part of efforts to improve COVID-19 vaccination; evidence-based communications tailored to their concerns are needed.

Article history

Received
2023-12-16
Accepted
2023-02-08
بحث أصيل كامل

COVID-19 vaccination coverage among female healthcare workers: a look at the gender gap

Published
2023-02-08
الصفحات
367 - 378
البحث كاملا

الكلمات الإفتتاحية

  • Attitudes
  • Coverage;
  • COVID-19;
  • Vaccination
  • Gender;
  • workers;
  • Healthcare

الملخص

The COVID-19 vaccine coverage has been shown to differ by gender, with females being more hesitant to vaccinate, even among healthcare workers. This study aimed to assess female healthcare workers' COVID-19 vaccination coverage and anti-vaccination attitudes. We conducted a cross-sectional study using an online questionnaire. We included healthcare workers from various professions and examined their sociodemographic characteristics and anti-vaccination attitudes using the Vaccination Attitudes Examination Scale and COVID-19 vaccination coverage. In addition, we assessed factors associated with coverage using multivariable analysis. Female healthcare workers had significantly lower vaccine coverage [59.6% (95%CI: 55.5%-63.7%)] than males [74.9% (95%CI: 70.7-78.8%)]. In addition, they have significantly higher anti-vaccination attitudes and lower perceived vaccine knowledge. Vaccine coverage is age-related in female healthcare workers, with 52.7% in the less than 30-year age group and 70.7% in the ≥50-year age group. The age group 40-49 and middle-income category are positively associated with vaccination coverage among female healthcare workers. In contrast, living with a child, having a history of COVID-19 infection, mistrust of vaccine benefits, and worries about unforeseen effects are all associated with lower coverage. In conclusion, female healthcare workers have significantly lower vaccine coverage, especially for the younger age groups, associated with mistrust of vaccine benefits and worries about unforeseen effects. These findings highlight the importance of addressing vaccine hesitancy among female HCWs as part of efforts to improve COVID-19 vaccination; evidence-based communications tailored to their concerns are needed.

Article history

تاريخ التسليم
2023-12-16
تاريخ القبول
2023-02-08