Cargando…

Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE

Introduction: COVID-19 is considered the greatest health disaster affecting humans during the 21st century, which urged the need to develop an effective vaccine to acquire enough immunity against the virus. The main challenge faced during the development of such vaccines was the insufficiency of tim...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kharaba, Zelal, Ahmed, Rahaf, Khalil, Alaa M., Al-Ahmed, Raneem M., Said, Amira S. A., Elnour, Asim Ahmed, Cherri, Sarah, Jirjees, Feras, Afifi, Hala, Ashmawy, Naglaa S., Mahboub, Bassam, Alfoteih, Yassen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9501200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36146512
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10091434
_version_ 1784795415419289600
author Kharaba, Zelal
Ahmed, Rahaf
Khalil, Alaa M.
Al-Ahmed, Raneem M.
Said, Amira S. A.
Elnour, Asim Ahmed
Cherri, Sarah
Jirjees, Feras
Afifi, Hala
Ashmawy, Naglaa S.
Mahboub, Bassam
Alfoteih, Yassen
author_facet Kharaba, Zelal
Ahmed, Rahaf
Khalil, Alaa M.
Al-Ahmed, Raneem M.
Said, Amira S. A.
Elnour, Asim Ahmed
Cherri, Sarah
Jirjees, Feras
Afifi, Hala
Ashmawy, Naglaa S.
Mahboub, Bassam
Alfoteih, Yassen
author_sort Kharaba, Zelal
collection PubMed
description Introduction: COVID-19 is considered the greatest health disaster affecting humans during the 21st century, which urged the need to develop an effective vaccine to acquire enough immunity against the virus. The main challenge faced during the development of such vaccines was the insufficiency of time, which raised the question about the vaccine safety and efficacy, especially among children. Parents’ and caregivers’ thoughts and acceptance of administering the vaccine to their children are still debatable topics and are yet to be explored in the UAE. Aims: The study aims to exploit parent acceptance, perception, and hesitancy toward the COVID-19 vaccine administration for their children and the link with their choice of distance learning instead of face-to-face education in the UAE. Methodology: This study utilized a cross-sectional descriptive design. A sample of 1049 parents across all emirates were conveniently approached and surveyed using Google forms from June to September 2021. The participants responded to a semi-structured questionnaire pertaining to socio-demographic, educational, and other questions related to COVID-19 and its link with their beliefs in whether the vaccination of their children will help with resuming face-to-face learning. Results: Approximately 74% of the parents confirmed that their children who are 16 years old and above have received the vaccine, and 71% were willing to give the vaccine to their children aged above 5 years. Parents with children receiving online education and those with children where the online modality of learning negatively affected their academic achievement are more prone to administer the COVID-19 vaccine to their children above five years old. The results show a significant association between vaccination of children and the parental desire for resuming physical attendance in schools (p value < 0.001). Multivariate analysis showed that the highest acceptance rate was from parents with children of low academic achievement due to online learning modality during the pandemic. Conclusion: In the UAE, parents of young children have shown a positive attitude towards COVID-19 vaccination in belief that vaccines will reduce the risk of infection and assist in resuming normal lifestyles, such as going back physically to schools. The results reflect the public awareness and the hypervigilance regarding the COVID-19 pandemic in the UAE.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9501200
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-95012002022-09-24 Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE Kharaba, Zelal Ahmed, Rahaf Khalil, Alaa M. Al-Ahmed, Raneem M. Said, Amira S. A. Elnour, Asim Ahmed Cherri, Sarah Jirjees, Feras Afifi, Hala Ashmawy, Naglaa S. Mahboub, Bassam Alfoteih, Yassen Vaccines (Basel) Article Introduction: COVID-19 is considered the greatest health disaster affecting humans during the 21st century, which urged the need to develop an effective vaccine to acquire enough immunity against the virus. The main challenge faced during the development of such vaccines was the insufficiency of time, which raised the question about the vaccine safety and efficacy, especially among children. Parents’ and caregivers’ thoughts and acceptance of administering the vaccine to their children are still debatable topics and are yet to be explored in the UAE. Aims: The study aims to exploit parent acceptance, perception, and hesitancy toward the COVID-19 vaccine administration for their children and the link with their choice of distance learning instead of face-to-face education in the UAE. Methodology: This study utilized a cross-sectional descriptive design. A sample of 1049 parents across all emirates were conveniently approached and surveyed using Google forms from June to September 2021. The participants responded to a semi-structured questionnaire pertaining to socio-demographic, educational, and other questions related to COVID-19 and its link with their beliefs in whether the vaccination of their children will help with resuming face-to-face learning. Results: Approximately 74% of the parents confirmed that their children who are 16 years old and above have received the vaccine, and 71% were willing to give the vaccine to their children aged above 5 years. Parents with children receiving online education and those with children where the online modality of learning negatively affected their academic achievement are more prone to administer the COVID-19 vaccine to their children above five years old. The results show a significant association between vaccination of children and the parental desire for resuming physical attendance in schools (p value < 0.001). Multivariate analysis showed that the highest acceptance rate was from parents with children of low academic achievement due to online learning modality during the pandemic. Conclusion: In the UAE, parents of young children have shown a positive attitude towards COVID-19 vaccination in belief that vaccines will reduce the risk of infection and assist in resuming normal lifestyles, such as going back physically to schools. The results reflect the public awareness and the hypervigilance regarding the COVID-19 pandemic in the UAE. MDPI 2022-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC9501200/ /pubmed/36146512 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10091434 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kharaba, Zelal
Ahmed, Rahaf
Khalil, Alaa M.
Al-Ahmed, Raneem M.
Said, Amira S. A.
Elnour, Asim Ahmed
Cherri, Sarah
Jirjees, Feras
Afifi, Hala
Ashmawy, Naglaa S.
Mahboub, Bassam
Alfoteih, Yassen
Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE
title Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE
title_full Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE
title_fullStr Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE
title_full_unstemmed Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE
title_short Parents’ Perception, Acceptance, and Hesitancy to Vaccinate Their Children against COVID-19: Results from a National Study in the UAE
title_sort parents’ perception, acceptance, and hesitancy to vaccinate their children against covid-19: results from a national study in the uae
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9501200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36146512
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10091434
work_keys_str_mv AT kharabazelal parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT ahmedrahaf parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT khalilalaam parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT alahmedraneemm parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT saidamirasa parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT elnourasimahmed parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT cherrisarah parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT jirjeesferas parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT afifihala parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT ashmawynaglaas parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT mahboubbassam parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae
AT alfoteihyassen parentsperceptionacceptanceandhesitancytovaccinatetheirchildrenagainstcovid19resultsfromanationalstudyintheuae