Examining the hesitations of pregnant women towards COVID-19 vaccines during the pandemic: A mixed methods approach
- PMID: 40449311
- DOI: 10.1016/j.midw.2025.104469
Examining the hesitations of pregnant women towards COVID-19 vaccines during the pandemic: A mixed methods approach
Abstract
Background: Various reasons stemming from direct vaccine concerns, individual factors, and sociocultural and environmental factors contribute to vaccine hesitancy among pregnant women regarding COVID-19 vaccines.
Aims: The study described and compare pregnant women's perspectives on COVID-19 vaccination during the pandemic and to identify barriers and facilitators.
Findings: A mixed-methods research design was adopted to integrate quantitative and qualitative descriptive methods. At a state hospital in the western region of Turkey, 249 pregnant women attending the maternity clinic from March to August 2022 were surveyed using questionnaires, and in-depth individual interviews were conducted with 17 of them. The interview topics were based on the participants' perceptions and attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccines. A mixed-methods research design was adopted, using quantitative purposive sampling to describe and compare their COVID-19 vaccination status and qualitative purposive sampling to identify their hesitations regarding COVID-19 vaccines, analyzed through content analysis. Reporting followed the GRAMMS guidelines.
Discussion: Sixty-six percent of pregnant women had not received the COVID-19 vaccine. Those with advanced age, lower education levels, and lower income exhibited higher levels of vaccine hesitancy. The hesitations of pregnant women toward COVID-19 vaccines revealed three main themes: direct vaccine-related hesitation, hesitation arising from individual factors, and hesitation stemming from socio-cultural and environmental factors.
Conclusion: Vaccine hesitancy, which emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic, was a significant cause for concern. This hesitancy was explained by three main themes: vaccine hesitancy arising from the vaccine itself, vaccine hesitancy due to individual factors, and vaccine hesitancy stemming from socio-cultural and environmental factors. Additionally, sub-themes such as perceptions related to the management of the vaccination program, personal and infant-related risk-benefit assessments, the influence of anti-vaccine activists on social media, and political factors were also identified as playing a significant role in vaccine hesitancy.
Keywords: COVID-19; COVID-19 Vaccines; Midwifery; Mix Method; Pregnancy.
Copyright © 2025 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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