Author | Study design | Study Sample | Setting | Content | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Christian et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:42583 | Denmark | The relationship between prayer frequency and vaccine hesitancy | [39] |
Sanghavi et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:59 | India | The relationship between perceptions of vaccines and vaccine hesitancy | [33] |
Tânia et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:602 | Portugal | The impact of perceptions, knowledge, and attitudes on vaccine hesitancy | [36] |
Divya et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:5784 | America | Impact of primary COVID-19 information sources on vaccine hesitancy and uptake among community-dwelling older adults | [25] |
Micah et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:6094 | Singapore | The impact of information sources on vaccine hesitancy among older adults | [38] |
Andaleeb et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:350 | Jordan | The impact of vaccine attitudes and cognition on vaccine hesitancy | [22] |
Zhang et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:2109 | China | Factors influencing vaccine hesitancy among elderly people living alone or with partners | [44] |
Judy et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:31 | China | Factors influencing vaccine hesitancy at the individual level, social level, etc | [37] |
Robbert et al. | Cross-sectiona | Total:23 | America | Barriers to COVID-19 vaccination among racial and ethnic minorities and reasons for hesitancy and measures | [28] |
Farooq et al. | Case control study | Total:141 | Thailand | Using vaccinated people as the case group, a case–control study was used to explore the influencing factors of vaccine hesitancy among the elderly in Muslim communities | [31] |
Nandini et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:3804 | India | Hesitancy and influencing factors of COVID-19 vaccine booster shots among the elderly in slums and immigrant areas | [35] |
Paul et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:370 | China | The influencing factors of hesitancy for the second booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine | [26] |
Boaz et al. | Cross-sectiona | Total:400 | Israel | Factors influencing self-perception and vaccine hesitancy on vaccination | [24] |
Janna et al. | Cross-sectiona | Total:24 | America | The impact of gender and race on COVID-19 vaccination in older adults | [34] |
Aminath et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:21,663 | Singapore | COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and influencing factors | [29] |
Yang et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:1341 | China | Reducing drivers of vaccine hesitancy | [42] |
Noura et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:1037 | Syria | Reasons for vaccine hesitancy among older refugees | [32] |
Lu et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:225 | China | Link to frailty and vaccine hesitancy in older adults | [41] |
Lu et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:725 | China | The relationship between cognitive factors and vaccine hesitancy | [45] |
Mohammed et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:488 | Saudi Arabia | Factors influencing vaccination willingness among community elders | [23] |
Marta et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:19 | Swiss | Factors responsible for vaccine hesitancy and willingness to be vaccinated | [27] |
Anthony et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:400 | Ghana | Conspiracy theories, trust in public health information, social capital, and the impact of vaccine hesitancy | [30] |
Yuan et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:27 | China | Factors influencing vaccine hesitancy in the elderly and strategies to address it | [43] |
Wang et al. | Cross-sectional | Total:9890 | China | Determinants of COVID-19 vaccination status and hesitancy | [40] |