Vaccine hesitancy in migrant communities: a rapid review of latest evidence.

Akhenaten SiankamTankwanchi; BrettBowman; MichelleGarrison; Heidi Larson ORCID logo; Charles SheyWiysonge; (2021) Vaccine hesitancy in migrant communities: a rapid review of latest evidence. Current opinion in immunology, 71. pp. 62-68. ISSN 0952-7915 DOI: 10.1016/j.coi.2021.05.009
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By refusing or delaying vaccination, vaccine hesitant individuals and communities undermine the prevention, and ultimately, elimination of communicable diseases against which safe and effective vaccines are available. We reviewed recent evidence of vaccine hesitancy within migrant communities in the context of increased human mobility and widespread anti-immigrant sentiment and manifest xenophobia. Among many immigrant parents and families, vaccine hesitancy is largely associated with fears and misinformation about vaccine harms, limited knowledge of both preventable diseases and vaccines, distrust of host countries' health systems and their attendant intentions, language barriers, and perceived incompatibility between vaccine uptake and migrants' religion. Hesitancy toward measles, influenza, and human papillomavirus vaccines are most discernible, and main migrant populations involved include Somalis and Poles.



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