Research Article
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Year 2022, Volume: 12 Issue: 2, 111 - 115, 31.08.2022

Abstract

References

  • 1. Jin Y, Yang H, Ji W, Wu W, Chen S, Zhang W, et al. Virology, Epidemiology, Pathogenesis, and Control of COVID-19. Nov Res Microbiol J. 2020;4(5):955-967. doi:10.21608/nrmj.2020.118446
  • 2. https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html, Date of Access: 25.08.2021 10:00
  • 3. Trougakos IP, Stamatelopoulos K, Terpos E, Tsitsilonis OE, Aivalioti E, Paraskevis D, et al. Insights to SARS-CoV-2 life cycle, pathophysiology, and rationalized treatments that target COVID-19 clinical complications. J Biomed Sci. 2021;28 (1):1-18. doi:10.1186/s12929-020-00703-5
  • 4. Triggle CR, Bansal D, Farag EABA, Ding H, Sultan AA. COVID-19: Learning from Lessons To Guide Treatment and Prevention Interventions. mSphere. 2020 May 13;5(3):e00317-20. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00317-20. PMID: 32404514; PMCID: PMC7227770.
  • 5. Chung JY, Thone MN, Young Jik Kwon. COVID-19 vaccines: The status and perspectives in delivery points of view. Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2021;170(October):1-25.
  • 6. Güngör S, Örün E. SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine Researches. Journal of Health Science Yuksek Ihtisas University, 2020 1, 42-47.
  • 7. World Health Organization (WHO), WHO Director-General's opening remarks at the media briefing on COVID-19 https://www.who.int/director-general/speeches/detail/who-director-general-s-opening-remarks-at-the-media-briefing-on-covid-19---11-march-2020 Date of Access: 25.08.2021; 13:03
  • 8. Paul E, Steptoe A, Fancourt D. Attitudes towards vaccines and intention to vaccinate against COVID-19: Implications for public health communications. Lancet Reg Heal - Eur. 2020;000:100012. doi:10.1016/j.lanepe.2020.100012
  • 9. Yiğit T, Oktay BÖ, Özdemir CN, Pasa M. Anti-Vaccinatıon And It’s Intellectual Appearance. Journal of Social and Humanities Sciences Research, 2020, 7(53), 1244-1261.
  • 10. Yüksel GH, Topuzoğlu A. Factors Affecting Anti-Vaccination. ESTÜDAM Journal of Public Health, 2019, 4(2), 244-258.
  • 11. Alpar R. Applied statistics and validity-reliability. 2nd ed. Ankara: Detail Publishing; 2012.
  • 12. World Health Organization. Health Topics. Vaccines and Immunization. . https://www.who.int/health-topics/vaccines-and-immunization#tab=tab_1 (Date of Access 25.08.2021, 13:04)
  • 13. Askarian M, Fu L, Taghrir MH, Borazjani R, Shayan Z, Taherifard E. et al. Factors Affecting COVID-19 Vaccination Intent among Iranians: covid-19 vaccination acceptance. (December 3, 2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3741968
  • 14. Ocholla B A, Nyangena O, Murayi HK, Mwangi JW, Belle SK, Ondeko P. et al. Association of Demographic and Occupational Factors with SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine Uptake in Kenya. Open Access Library Journal, 2021, 8(5), 1-8
  • 15. Roy B, Kumar V, Venkatesh A. Health Care Workers’ Reluctance to Take the Covid-19 Vaccine: A Consumer-Marketing Approach to Identifying and Overcoming Hesitancy. NEJM Catalyst Innovations in Care Delivery, 2020, 1(6).
  • 16. Yıldırım Baş F. The Importance Of Vaccination In The Pandemia And Covid-19 Vaccination Studies. Med J SDU 2021; (ozelsayi-1):245-248.

Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination

Year 2022, Volume: 12 Issue: 2, 111 - 115, 31.08.2022

Abstract

Aim: This study aims to determine healthcare professionals' knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors toward COVID-19 disease and vaccine in the first days of vaccination.
Material and Method: The study was conducted in Sakarya Yenikent State Hospital between March 1-15, 2021, where the 2nd vaccine should also be completed for healthcare workers. The ethics committee of the study was obtained from the ethics committee of Sakarya University Faculty of Medicine. Healthcare workers who agreed to participate in the study were asked to fill out the interview form. Data were analyzed in SPSS 21 program.
Results: Of the health workers participating in the study, 189 were female, and the median age was 37.0 [28.0-44.0]. The distribution of health workers by profession is examined; 115 nurses, 28 doctors, 35 technicians, 32 medical secretaries, 30 cleaning personnel, and 62 other occupational groups. During the last winter season, “Have you had the flu shot?” While 111 health workers answered “yes” to the question, 52 of those vaccinated reported that they had the flu vaccine this winter season as well. One hundred seventy-one healthcare professionals said they were involved in caring for COVID-19 patients. While there are 89 healthcare workers with COVID-19 infection, 34 healthcare professionals did not know whether they had COVID-19 infection. While only 87 participants reported that they had enough knowledge about COVID-19 vaccines, 113 stated that they had no information, and 102 were undecided on this issue. While 141 healthcare professionals are concerned about COVID-19 vaccines, 149 had concerns about vaccine protection. While 49 participants thought that inactivated vaccines were resistant to mutation and 28 thought that they were not resistant, 225 of them did not know about this issue. While 29 healthcare professionals think that mRNA vaccines produce more antibodies than inactivated vaccines, 26 health professionals stated that they disagreed with this, and 247 indicated that they did not know about this issue. While 129 health professionals did not know whether or not breastfeeding women should be vaccinated, 127 thought breastfeeding women should not be vaccinated, and 46 thought they should be vaccinated. While 245 healthcare professionals reported that they had the COVID-19 vaccine, 213 were recommended to their close friends, and 215 recommended the patients be vaccinated for COVID-19. The vaccines most trusted by healthcare professionals are Sinovac/Coronovac (47.7%), Biontech (18.5%), Domestic COVID-19 vaccine (5%), Oxford AZ (4.3%), Moderna (4%), and Sputnik V (3.3%).
Conclusion: In our study, it was concluded that in the first days of the application of the COVID-19 vaccine, healthcare professionals do not have enough knowledge about COVID-19 vaccines, they are worried about COVID-19 vaccines, and they are worried about the protection of the vaccine, and the most reliable COVID-19 vaccine is Sinovac/Coronovac vaccine. Multidimensional studies are needed to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates.

References

  • 1. Jin Y, Yang H, Ji W, Wu W, Chen S, Zhang W, et al. Virology, Epidemiology, Pathogenesis, and Control of COVID-19. Nov Res Microbiol J. 2020;4(5):955-967. doi:10.21608/nrmj.2020.118446
  • 2. https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html, Date of Access: 25.08.2021 10:00
  • 3. Trougakos IP, Stamatelopoulos K, Terpos E, Tsitsilonis OE, Aivalioti E, Paraskevis D, et al. Insights to SARS-CoV-2 life cycle, pathophysiology, and rationalized treatments that target COVID-19 clinical complications. J Biomed Sci. 2021;28 (1):1-18. doi:10.1186/s12929-020-00703-5
  • 4. Triggle CR, Bansal D, Farag EABA, Ding H, Sultan AA. COVID-19: Learning from Lessons To Guide Treatment and Prevention Interventions. mSphere. 2020 May 13;5(3):e00317-20. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00317-20. PMID: 32404514; PMCID: PMC7227770.
  • 5. Chung JY, Thone MN, Young Jik Kwon. COVID-19 vaccines: The status and perspectives in delivery points of view. Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2021;170(October):1-25.
  • 6. Güngör S, Örün E. SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine Researches. Journal of Health Science Yuksek Ihtisas University, 2020 1, 42-47.
  • 7. World Health Organization (WHO), WHO Director-General's opening remarks at the media briefing on COVID-19 https://www.who.int/director-general/speeches/detail/who-director-general-s-opening-remarks-at-the-media-briefing-on-covid-19---11-march-2020 Date of Access: 25.08.2021; 13:03
  • 8. Paul E, Steptoe A, Fancourt D. Attitudes towards vaccines and intention to vaccinate against COVID-19: Implications for public health communications. Lancet Reg Heal - Eur. 2020;000:100012. doi:10.1016/j.lanepe.2020.100012
  • 9. Yiğit T, Oktay BÖ, Özdemir CN, Pasa M. Anti-Vaccinatıon And It’s Intellectual Appearance. Journal of Social and Humanities Sciences Research, 2020, 7(53), 1244-1261.
  • 10. Yüksel GH, Topuzoğlu A. Factors Affecting Anti-Vaccination. ESTÜDAM Journal of Public Health, 2019, 4(2), 244-258.
  • 11. Alpar R. Applied statistics and validity-reliability. 2nd ed. Ankara: Detail Publishing; 2012.
  • 12. World Health Organization. Health Topics. Vaccines and Immunization. . https://www.who.int/health-topics/vaccines-and-immunization#tab=tab_1 (Date of Access 25.08.2021, 13:04)
  • 13. Askarian M, Fu L, Taghrir MH, Borazjani R, Shayan Z, Taherifard E. et al. Factors Affecting COVID-19 Vaccination Intent among Iranians: covid-19 vaccination acceptance. (December 3, 2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3741968
  • 14. Ocholla B A, Nyangena O, Murayi HK, Mwangi JW, Belle SK, Ondeko P. et al. Association of Demographic and Occupational Factors with SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine Uptake in Kenya. Open Access Library Journal, 2021, 8(5), 1-8
  • 15. Roy B, Kumar V, Venkatesh A. Health Care Workers’ Reluctance to Take the Covid-19 Vaccine: A Consumer-Marketing Approach to Identifying and Overcoming Hesitancy. NEJM Catalyst Innovations in Care Delivery, 2020, 1(6).
  • 16. Yıldırım Baş F. The Importance Of Vaccination In The Pandemia And Covid-19 Vaccination Studies. Med J SDU 2021; (ozelsayi-1):245-248.
There are 16 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Clinical Sciences
Journal Section Research Article
Authors

Pınar Ozkan Oskay This is me 0000-0003-1327-6025

Gulsum Kaya This is me 0000-0003-2810-0153

Selma Altindis This is me 0000-0003-2805-5516

Mustafa Altindis This is me 0000-0003-0411-9669

Publication Date August 31, 2022
Published in Issue Year 2022 Volume: 12 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Ozkan Oskay, P., Kaya, G., Altindis, S., Altindis, M. (2022). Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination. Kafkas Journal of Medical Sciences, 12(2), 111-115.
AMA Ozkan Oskay P, Kaya G, Altindis S, Altindis M. Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination. KAFKAS TIP BİL DERG. August 2022;12(2):111-115.
Chicago Ozkan Oskay, Pınar, Gulsum Kaya, Selma Altindis, and Mustafa Altindis. “Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination”. Kafkas Journal of Medical Sciences 12, no. 2 (August 2022): 111-15.
EndNote Ozkan Oskay P, Kaya G, Altindis S, Altindis M (August 1, 2022) Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination. Kafkas Journal of Medical Sciences 12 2 111–115.
IEEE P. Ozkan Oskay, G. Kaya, S. Altindis, and M. Altindis, “Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination”, KAFKAS TIP BİL DERG, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 111–115, 2022.
ISNAD Ozkan Oskay, Pınar et al. “Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination”. Kafkas Journal of Medical Sciences 12/2 (August 2022), 111-115.
JAMA Ozkan Oskay P, Kaya G, Altindis S, Altindis M. Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination. KAFKAS TIP BİL DERG. 2022;12:111–115.
MLA Ozkan Oskay, Pınar et al. “Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination”. Kafkas Journal of Medical Sciences, vol. 12, no. 2, 2022, pp. 111-5.
Vancouver Ozkan Oskay P, Kaya G, Altindis S, Altindis M. Healthcare Professionals and COVID-19 Vaccine: Approaches of Health Workers to Vaccination in the First Days of Vaccination. KAFKAS TIP BİL DERG. 2022;12(2):111-5.