Acceptance and hesitancy towards COVID-19 vaccines in rural and tribal areas of Maharashtra (India)

Authors

  • Maninder Singh Setia MGM Institute of Health Sciences, Kamothe, Navi Mumbai
  • Ashlesha Tawde Department of Community Medicine, MGM Medical College, Kamothe, Navi Mumbai
  • Nisha Relwani Department of Community Medicine, MGM Medical College, Kamothe, Navi Mumbai
  • Prasad Waingankar Department of Community Medicine, MGM Medical College, Kamothe, Navi Mumbai
  • Revathi Natesan Department of Pediatrics, MGM Medical College, Kamothe, Navi Mumbai
  • Vijay Kamale Department of Pediatrics, MGM Medical College, Kamothe, Navi Mumbai
  • Bageshree Seth Department of Pediatrics, MGM Medical College, Kamothe, Navi Mumbai

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.18213

Keywords:

COVID-19 vaccination, acceptance, hesitancy, tribal, rural areas

Abstract

Introduction: Hesitancy towards COVID-19 vaccines may be a major hindrance to a successful vaccination program. We assessed the vaccine uptake, facilitators, and barriers for the COVID-19 vaccine in tribal and rural populations in Maharashtra, India.

Methodology: The present study is a cross-sectional analysis of data collected from 373 individuals from six villages (three tribal and three rural) from August 2022 to September 2022. Demographic information, COVID-19 history, details about vaccination, and reasons for taking/not taking the vaccine were collected.

Results: In these individuals, 236 (63.3%) had taken two doses, 85 (22.8%) had taken one dose, and 52 (13.9%) had not taken the vaccine. Tribal villagers were less likely to have completed vaccination (50.7% vs 79.3%; p < 0.001). Males were more likely to state ‘compulsory at my workplace’ (27.7% vs 7.7%; p < 0.001), whereas females were more likely to report ‘could not get ration food without it’ (52.7% vs 31.5%; p < 0.001) as the reason for vaccination. Common reasons for not taking the vaccine were: fear of side effects (56%); no need for vaccination (41.2%); do not trust the vaccines (40%); and ‘there is no such thing as COVID-19’(16%). A majority (94.7%) had completed COVID-19 vaccination at government vaccination centers.

Conclusions: Tribal villagers, women, and those from lower socioeconomic status were less likely to have taken the vaccine. Fear about side effects and mistrust about vaccines were the main reasons for not having taken the vaccine. Addressing these issues in mass information campaigns may help improve vaccination coverage.

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Published

2024-05-30

How to Cite

1.
Setia MS, Tawde A, Relwani N, Waingankar P, Natesan R, Kamale V, Seth B (2024) Acceptance and hesitancy towards COVID-19 vaccines in rural and tribal areas of Maharashtra (India). J Infect Dev Ctries 18:719–725. doi: 10.3855/jidc.18213

Issue

Section

Coronavirus Pandemic

Funding data