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Introduction: Several sub-Saharan African countries are launching malaria vaccination programmes for children. We assessed how attitudes to malaria vaccination for children could be better understood by considering the individual dynamics of COVID-19 vaccine intention/uptake over the 2021-2023 campaigns, with a view to highlighting barriers likely to affect malaria vaccine uptake.
Methods: We conducted a six-wave telephone-based survey of 600 randomly selected Senegalese households. A latent class mixed model was used to assess temporal changes in COVID-19 vaccine intention/uptake and to identify clusters of individuals sharing similar intention/uptake patterns across the waves. Time-invariant and time-varying correlates were assessed using logistic and probit models. Attitudes to malaria vaccination (wave 6) were compared with the various COVID-19 patterns.
Results: Of the 600 households contacted, 558 (93.00%) agreed to participate in the study (558 heads of household and 457 spouses). Very strong positive attitudes to malaria vaccination (65.28% of participants) were associated with higher personal COVID-19 vaccine uptake (p<0.001). With regard to the individual dynamics of COVID-19 vaccination, three temporal patterns were identified: continuously strong intention (34.88% of participants), increasingly strong intention (33.40%) and increasingly less strong intention (31.72%). Along with socioeconomic factors, these patterns were explained by early levels of risk perception and trust in health authorities, and temporal fluctuations of these factors. Households where both surveyed members had continuously strong COVID-19 vaccination intention were also more likely to have strong positive attitudes to malaria vaccination for children (p=0.001).
Conclusion: Further investigation would be necessary to assess the generalisability of using individual dynamics of COVID-19 vaccination as a reference for studying attitudes to newly offered vaccines. As regards the real-world dynamics of uptake of the four scheduled malaria vaccine doses, targeting of parents who need incentives to address barriers to compliance could be improved by accounting for their dynamics of COVID-19 vaccination.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2025-019027 | DOI Listing |
BMJ Glob Health
September 2025
Aix-Marseille Univ, IRD, SSA, MINES, Marseille, France.
Introduction: Several sub-Saharan African countries are launching malaria vaccination programmes for children. We assessed how attitudes to malaria vaccination for children could be better understood by considering the individual dynamics of COVID-19 vaccine intention/uptake over the 2021-2023 campaigns, with a view to highlighting barriers likely to affect malaria vaccine uptake.
Methods: We conducted a six-wave telephone-based survey of 600 randomly selected Senegalese households.
Front Immunol
September 2025
Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Innate-like T cells (ILT), including γδ T cells (Vδ2s), Natural Killer T cells (NKTs) and Mucosal-associated Invariant T cells (MAITs), integrate innate and adaptive immunity, playing important roles in homeostatic conditions as well as during infection or inflammation. ILT are present on both sides of the fetal-maternal interface, but our knowledge of their phenotypical and functional features in neonates is limited. Using spectral flow cytometry we characterized cord blood ILT in neonates born to healthy women and women living with HIV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMSMR
August 2025
Australian Defence Force Infectious Disease and Malaria Institute, Gallipoli Barracks, Enoggera, Queensland; University of Queensland School of Public Health, Brisbane.
Acta Trop
December 2024
Departamento de Microbiologia e Parasitologia, Centro de Investigação de Microrganismos, Instituto Biomédico, Universidade Federal Fluminense, Niterói, Rio de Janeiro 24020-141, Brazil; Programa de Pós-Graduação em Microbiologia e Parasitologia Aplicadas, Instituto Biomédico, Departamento de
The global distribution of Plasmodium vivax Circumsporozoite Protein variants (PvCSP), VK210, VK247, and P. vivax-like, plays a crucial role in malaria transmission and vaccine development. This systematic review and meta-analysis assessed the prevalence of these variants in humans and their association with Anopheles species worldwide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVaccine
September 2025
Centre for Quantitative Medicine, Duke-NUS Medical School, 20 College Road, 169856, Singapore; Signature Programme in Health Services & Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School, 8 College Road, 169857, Singapore; Tampere Center for Child, Adolescent and Maternal Health Research, Tampere University,
The Cox model and its extensions assuming proportional hazards is widely used to estimate vaccine efficacy (VE). However, when VE wanes over time, estimates can become sensitive to study duration and timing of vaccine delivery relative to disease seasonality, and may be biased due to sample attrition. Additionally, estimates of vaccine impact such as number of cases averted (NCA) are sensitive to background disease incidence and timing of vaccine delivery.
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