COVID-19 vaccine, my grandmother
On February 23 this year, Ghana became the first country outside India to receive COVID-19 vaccine doses shipped via the COVAX facility, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
In the coming days, more of such is expected in the country, with plans to vaccinate some 20 million persons from the first week of March, according to Kwame Amponsa-Akyianu, Programme Manager for the Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI).
Great moves by the government and its development partners, but will my grandmother take the vaccine?
Theories
Based on theories, people like grandma are supposed to be more interested in the vaccine due to their perceived susceptibility and severity.
However, she tells me she has fears and doubts about the vaccine. Since the virus emerged, she has been bombarded with negative information (possibly a lot of fake news) about it and the vaccine.
Initially, she was told that there is no such virus and that people with various conditions were simply being diagnosed as COVID-19, so the government could attract donor funds.
Subsequently, she was told that COVID-19 actually existed, but it was a creation of some people to wipe off the black race.
She was also told that the surgical masks had been infected with the virus, and so she advised us against using those masks.
Then when plans to produce a vaccine were underway, she received information that some people had died after participating in the vaccine trial.
This was at a time that the vaccine trials had not even begun in Europe. She has even been told of a grand conspiracy to use the vaccine to put a microchip in our bodies in fulfilment of the Christian belief of the 666 mark of the beast.
Now, she hears the vaccine is coming to her doorstep and she says, “oh my God.”
Many
It is obvious that there are many like my grandmother who will not be receptive of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Monitoring media reports and vox pops, I get the feeling that some are very doubtful of this whole vaccination campaign, and they may be justified given that myths around the pandemic have not been adequately dispelled.
Yet, at this point, it is crucial that we get our people vaccinated. We cannot do this without addressing their fears and perceptions.
We cannot do this without engaging them. We cannot risk putting our vaccinators in danger of being attacked.
Having the vaccine is one thing. Getting people to accept the vaccine is another.
Our communication efforts will certainly need to go beyond indicating the benefits of the vaccine to addressing the fears and misconceptions of the Ghanaian populace.
Participatory
In doing this, we need to use a participatory approach and also consciously employ a two-step flow model.
We can continue to design and disseminate mass media messages, but these messages can best target some of our people, especially the literate who consume and have high trust in the mass media.
We need to get down to our regional and district levels and gather key stakeholders to collectively agree on the common misconceptions of the virus and the vaccine in their localities.
Together, they can agree on a strategy to engage their people and pave the way for the vaccination exercise.
We need to make use of our religious and opinion leaders and chiefs. We need to make use of our associations and community groupings.
Their personal interaction with the people may have a stronger effect than the mass media, directly.
We also need to utilise the same platforms that have been used to spread misinformation, e.g., WhatsApp.
In a similar fashion, we can get people to record videos to address the misconceptions and emphasise the key messages.
It may not also be bad for us to start with the early adopters. As Everett Rogers (1962) observed in his Diffusion of Innovation theory, in introducing an innovation, there are mostly early adopters, late adopters or laggards, among others.
Waiting to see
Clearly, there are people who are waiting to see how the vaccination will start and how those vaccinated will react.
It may be a good idea to phase our vaccination to ensure that those in more need and those very willing can start.
Then, gradually, the rest of the population will come along, hopefully, by the time we do a general vaccination. The government has announced plans to start with health workers and other identified groups.
They may consider also starting with some influential people at the national and local levels to whip up interest in the vaccination.
I do not know whether I am an early adopter or laggard. Which one are you?