Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysis

Abstract Background and Aims Influenza is one of the most widespread respiratory infections and poses a huge burden on health care worldwide. Vaccination is key to preventing and controlling influenza. Influenza vaccine hesitancy is an important reason for the low vaccination rate. In 2019, Vaccine...

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Main Authors: Zhengyu Zhang, Songjia Tang, Zhihui Huang, Juntao Tan, Xiaoxin Wu, Qian Hong, Yuan Yuan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-02-01
Series:Health Science Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/hsr2.1820
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author Zhengyu Zhang
Songjia Tang
Zhihui Huang
Juntao Tan
Xiaoxin Wu
Qian Hong
Yuan Yuan
author_facet Zhengyu Zhang
Songjia Tang
Zhihui Huang
Juntao Tan
Xiaoxin Wu
Qian Hong
Yuan Yuan
author_sort Zhengyu Zhang
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background and Aims Influenza is one of the most widespread respiratory infections and poses a huge burden on health care worldwide. Vaccination is key to preventing and controlling influenza. Influenza vaccine hesitancy is an important reason for the low vaccination rate. In 2019, Vaccine hesitancy was identified as one of the top 10 threats to global health by the World Health Organization. However, there remains a glaring scarcity of bibliometric research in that regard. This study sought to identify research hotspots and future development trends on influenza vaccine hesitation and provide a new perspective and reference for future research. Methods We retrieved publications on global influenza vaccine hesitancy from the Web of Science Core Collection database, Scopus, and PubMed databases from inception to 2022. This study used VOSviewer and CiteSpace for visualization analysis. Results Influenza vaccine hesitancy‐related publications increased rapidly from 2012 and peaked in 2022. One hundred and nine countries contributed to influenza vaccine hesitation research, and the United States ranked first with 541 articles and 7161 citations. Vaccines‐Basel was the journal with the largest number of published studies on influenza vaccine hesitations. MacDonald was the most frequently cited author. The most popular research topics on influenza vaccine hesitancy were (1) determinants of influenza vaccination in specific populations, such as healthcare workers, children, pregnant women, and so on; (2) influenza and COVID‐19 vaccine hesitancy during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Conclusions The trend in the number of annual publications related to influenza vaccine hesitancy indicating the COVID‐19 pandemic will prompt researchers to increase their attention to influenza vaccine hesitancy. With healthcare workers as the key, reducing vaccine hesitancy and improving vaccine acceptance in high‐risk groups will be the research direction in the next few years.
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spelling doaj.art-80aa41b486754a0a827d905355d6dc302024-04-05T11:41:32ZengWileyHealth Science Reports2398-88352024-02-0172n/an/a10.1002/hsr2.1820Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysisZhengyu Zhang0Songjia Tang1Zhihui Huang2Juntao Tan3Xiaoxin Wu4Qian Hong5Yuan Yuan6Department of Medical Records, The First Affiliated Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou ChinaDepartment of Plastic and Aesthetic Surgery, Affiliated Hangzhou First People's Hospital Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou Zhejiang ChinaDepartment of Respiratory People's Hospital of Anji, Anji County Huzhou Zhejiang ChinaOperation Management Office Affiliated Banan Hospital of Chongqing Medical University Chongqing ChinaState Key Laboratory for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases Zhejiang University School of Medicine Hangzhou Zhejiang ChinaDepartment of Medical Records The First Hospital of Lanzhou University Lanzhou ChinaDepartment of Medical Records Women and Children's Hospital of Chongqing Medical University Chongqing ChinaAbstract Background and Aims Influenza is one of the most widespread respiratory infections and poses a huge burden on health care worldwide. Vaccination is key to preventing and controlling influenza. Influenza vaccine hesitancy is an important reason for the low vaccination rate. In 2019, Vaccine hesitancy was identified as one of the top 10 threats to global health by the World Health Organization. However, there remains a glaring scarcity of bibliometric research in that regard. This study sought to identify research hotspots and future development trends on influenza vaccine hesitation and provide a new perspective and reference for future research. Methods We retrieved publications on global influenza vaccine hesitancy from the Web of Science Core Collection database, Scopus, and PubMed databases from inception to 2022. This study used VOSviewer and CiteSpace for visualization analysis. Results Influenza vaccine hesitancy‐related publications increased rapidly from 2012 and peaked in 2022. One hundred and nine countries contributed to influenza vaccine hesitation research, and the United States ranked first with 541 articles and 7161 citations. Vaccines‐Basel was the journal with the largest number of published studies on influenza vaccine hesitations. MacDonald was the most frequently cited author. The most popular research topics on influenza vaccine hesitancy were (1) determinants of influenza vaccination in specific populations, such as healthcare workers, children, pregnant women, and so on; (2) influenza and COVID‐19 vaccine hesitancy during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Conclusions The trend in the number of annual publications related to influenza vaccine hesitancy indicating the COVID‐19 pandemic will prompt researchers to increase their attention to influenza vaccine hesitancy. With healthcare workers as the key, reducing vaccine hesitancy and improving vaccine acceptance in high‐risk groups will be the research direction in the next few years.https://doi.org/10.1002/hsr2.1820bibliometricdata visualizationinfluenzavaccine hesitancy
spellingShingle Zhengyu Zhang
Songjia Tang
Zhihui Huang
Juntao Tan
Xiaoxin Wu
Qian Hong
Yuan Yuan
Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysis
Health Science Reports
bibliometric
data visualization
influenza
vaccine hesitancy
title Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysis
title_full Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysis
title_fullStr Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysis
title_full_unstemmed Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysis
title_short Mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy: A bibliometric analysis
title_sort mapping trends and hotspots in research on global influenza vaccine hesitancy a bibliometric analysis
topic bibliometric
data visualization
influenza
vaccine hesitancy
url https://doi.org/10.1002/hsr2.1820
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