Assessing Community and Social Media Influence to Increase Influenza Vaccine Uptake among Youth in Soweto, South Africa (The Bambisana Study): Protocol for a Mixed Methods Pretest-Posttest Intervention Study
Janan Dietrich, Catherine Hill, Gugulethu Tshabalala, Tshepiso Msibi, Stefanie Vermaak, Mulalo Mashamba, Nellie Myburgh, Sarah Malycha, Isabella Goldstein, Elliot Grainger, Prima Alam, Kimberley Gutu, Kennedy Otwombe, Heidi J. Larson, Ziyaad Dangor

TL;DR
This study explores how community and social media engagement can increase influenza vaccine uptake among young adults in Soweto, South Africa.
Contribution
The study introduces a mixed-methods intervention using local influencers and social media to boost vaccination rates among marginalized youth.
Findings
Community and social media interventions can influence perceptions and confidence in influenza vaccination.
Tailored education and engagement strategies may increase vaccine uptake in populations without clear vaccination mandates.
Mixed methods pretest-posttest designs can effectively evaluate behavioral change interventions in public health.
Abstract
Seasonal influenza has an estimated global reach of 3-5 million infections, with 290,000-650,000 influenza-related deaths yearly. Despite its efficacy in reducing morbidity and mortality, influenza vaccination rates remain low globally and in South Africa. Youth between the ages of 18 and 34 years are not prioritized for influenza vaccines although influenza surveillance in South Africa shows that individuals aged 19-44 years present the highest asymptomatic episodes and the lowest medically attended illness. This creates an opportunity to investigate if and how vaccine demand can be created in the absence of clear imperatives to vaccinate. The study tests the effectiveness of tailored, context-specific education, and community engagement, including community and social media to increase influenza vaccination uptake. Tailored, context-specific education, community engagement, reliable…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfluenza Virus Research Studies · Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · Respiratory viral infections research
