Infecting minds: socio-contextual drivers of vaccine perceptions and attitudes among young and older adults living in urban and rural areas in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Publication date: Mar 21, 2025

We investigated how social and contextual factors, including a pandemic, shape vaccine perceptions and attitudes among people living in KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa. We assessed how participants’ views, acceptance, and uptake of vaccines for a range of infectious diseases, may be influenced by experiences and events linked to the COVID-19 pandemic. We conducted 30 in-depth face-to-face and telephonic interviews with participants living in diverse rural and urban communities in two districts within KwaZulu-Natal. Participants were adults (≥ 18 years) consisting of ordinary citizens, traditional healers, and nurses. We combined non-representative convenience, snowballing and purposeful sampling techniques to recruit participants. Data collection was conducted in IsiZulu, and we used both inductive and deductive thematic analysis approaches to identify key themes linked to participants’ perceptions and attitudes towards vaccines. Our study participants were mostly those who had accepted vaccination. The main reasons given for vaccine uptake included understanding the importance of vaccines for disease prevention and survival, and securing the health of family members, the fear of death, government campaigns, vaccine mandates and penalties. Older participants (≥ 40 years) demonstrated more positive attitudes towards vaccines. Most participants downplayed the role of culture and religion in attitudes towards vaccines. However, some of the drivers of vaccine hesitancy were having an ancestral calling, medical pluralism, or local myths around the treatment of infections such as influenza and mumps, and a perceived depopulation agenda couched in mistrust and the use of incentives and penalties to force people to accept COVID-19 vaccines. Exploring what shapes attitudes towards vaccines in communities provides opportunities to understand the reasoning behind how people make decisions about whether to take a vaccine in different geographical and cultural spaces. The exploration of contexts, exposures and circumstances provide insights into perceptions and behaviour. Deeper engagement with local communities is crucial to develop evidence that can inform vaccine interventions. Assumptions about how culture and religion affect vaccine hesitancy or acceptance should be avoided in the process of developing such evidence.

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Concepts Keywords
Africa Adolescent
Depopulation Adult
Drivers Aged
Snowballing COVID-19
Vaccination COVID-19
COVID-19 Vaccines
COVID-19 Vaccines
Female
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Male
Medical pluralism
Middle Aged
Public engagement
Qualitative Research
Rural Population
South Africa
South Africa
Urban Population
Vaccination
Vaccination Hesitancy
Vaccine confidence
Vaccine hesitancy
Young Adult

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH infectious diseases
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease MESH fear of death
disease IDO role
disease MESH infections
disease MESH influenza
disease MESH mumps
disease IDO process
pathway REACTOME Reproduction
disease MESH death
drug DRUGBANK Pentaerythritol tetranitrate
disease MESH polio
disease IDO history
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease MESH Smallpox
disease IDO disposition
drug DRUGBANK Huperzine B
disease MESH unemployment
drug DRUGBANK Isoxaflutole
disease IDO site
drug DRUGBANK Clostridium tetani toxoid antigen (formaldehyde inactivated)
disease MESH Tetanus
disease MESH Diphtheria
disease MESH cross infection
disease MESH uncertainty
disease MESH chronic diseases
drug DRUGBANK Polyethylene glycol
drug DRUGBANK Water
disease MESH measles
pathway KEGG Measles
disease IDO intervention
disease MESH scars
disease MESH bile
disease MESH erectile dysfunction
disease MESH anxiety
disease MESH allergic reactions
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH autism
disease IDO country
disease IDO infection
pathway REACTOME Translation
disease MESH privacy
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease MESH sterility
drug DRUGBANK Kale
disease MESH AIDS

Original Article

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