1. Introduction
Vaccines unarguably play a very key role in the prevention of infectious diseases across all populations of the world [
1]. There are several types of vaccines used in specific populations such as children, adolescents, pregnant women as well as the general adult population, and their application may differ between jurisdictions [
2]. In Ghana, for instance, immunization for children less than five years old is targeted at preventing 12 infectious diseases: tuberculosis, poliomyelitis, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, hepatitis B,
Haemophilus influenza type b (Hib), measles, rubella, pneumonia, rotavirus, and yellow fever. These vaccines are administered at various stages of the development of the children. This immunization schedule begins with the Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG)/tuberculosis vaccine and the oral polio vaccine (OPV), which are given to the neonate within 24 hours of delivery, followed by diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, Hib and hepatitis B combined penta (5-in-1) vaccine, pneumococcal vaccine (PCV), OPV, and rotavirus vaccines at 6 weeks of age, 5-in-1 vaccine, PCV OPV, and rotavirus at 10 weeks of age, 5-in-1 vaccine, PCV, and OPV at 14 weeks of age, measles and rubella combined vaccine and yellow fever vaccine at 9 months of age, after which the measles vaccine is given at 18 months of age [
3]. Aside from the standard immunization schedule, booster doses of these vaccines are given as and when they are needed during infectious disease outbreaks. In the UK, 12 vaccines are also administered to children below 5 years of age, with three of their vaccines (meningitis B, meningitis C and mumps vaccines) not part of the schedule used in Ghana. In place of these three vaccines used in the UK, Ghana has BCG, tetanus, and yellow fever vaccines. In the UK infant immunization schedule, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, poliomyelitis, Hib and hepatitis B vaccines are given in a single combined formulation (6-in-1 injection), in addition to PCV, rotavirus vaccine, and meningitis B vaccine for infants aged 2 months, as their first vaccines after birth. This is followed by a second dose of the 6-in-one vaccine and rotavirus vaccine at age 3 months. Thereafter, a third dose of the 6-in-1 vaccine and second doses of PCV and meningitis B are given. Finally, a fourth dose of Hib and a first dose of meningitis C vaccine, given as a single formulation, measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) as a single formulation and third doses of PCV and meningitis B are administered between 12 and 13 months of age [
4]. Even though vaccines are very potent preventers of infection, they are associated with adverse reactions, most of which are minor, yet of global health concern. For instance, the BCG vaccine, which is administered to about 100 million newborns across the world annually, is associated with a few adverse events such as fever, rash, pain, suppurative adenopathy, anaphylaxis, and abscess at injection site [
5,
6].
Healthcare professionals (HCPs) form a very significant group among the stakeholders of vaccine safety [
7]. Vaccines go through the phases of drug development from discovery, preclinical testing, and clinical trials just like pharmacological agents do, before approval by regulatory agencies for use [
8,
9]. Post-market surveillance of vaccines after their regulatory approval is crucial, because it helps to identify rare and late-occurring adverse events that were not discovered during clinical trials. The spontaneous reporting of suspected adverse events following immunization (AEFI) by HCPs is vital for the monitoring of post-licensure vaccine safety [
10]. Evidence shows that in most low and middle-income countries (LMICs) without robust pharmacovigilance systems, HCPs play a significant role in observing medicine related harms and documenting them; this process has often led to the improvement in the functionality of pharmacovigilance systems, or their establishment in countries without these systems [
11]. Africa lags behind in the field of vaccine pharmacovigilance, as revealed by an analysis of data in the World Health Organization (WHO) vaccine safety database, Vigibase, in June 2015. This analysis revealed that less than 1% of all global AEFI reports were from Africa. The analysis further showed that about 97% of these African AEFI reports came from 10 African countries, which were Egypt, Democratic Republic of Congo, Morocco, South Africa, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe, Tunisia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Senegal [
12]. This is a serious situation, as Africa has 54 countries, and more vaccine doses are being administered on the continent due to the emergence of serious infections and a burgeoning population [
13,
14,
15]. Consequently, more AEFIs are expected than the handful reported by the few African countries observed in the Vigibase analysis above. It is therefore important for HCPs in Africa to have knowledge about AEFIs, in order to properly diagnose and report them, enhancing vaccine safety and the functionality of pharmacovigilance systems. Additionally, knowledge of AEFIs enhances treatment of life threatening conditions associated with some AEFIs [
10].
The success of immunization programs depends partly on HCPs, who serve as important stakeholders in both the facilities where they work and the communities in which they live [
16]. Good knowledge of vaccines and their associated adverse events could boost vaccination coverage, as HCPs will impart the knowledge they have acquired to patients in their facilities and people in their various communities, thereby improving vaccine safety and public trust in immunizations [
17]. Poor knowledge and perceptions of HCPs about storage and administration of vaccines, as well as the AEFIs possible with vaccine products, have been found to be associated with failures of several immunization programs [
18,
19]. Vaccines lose their potency when stored at temperatures below and above the cold chain temperature range of 2 degrees Celsius to 8 degrees Celsius [
20]. Apart from losing their potency through poor cold chain maintenance, temperature fluctuations could cause vaccine products to change to toxic forms, which could cause AEFIs [
21,
22]. For instance, in May 2017, 15 children died of severe sepsis and toxicity from contaminated measles vaccines in Kapoeta, South Sudan, due to poor vaccine cold chain storage [
23]. To prevent such tragedies from recurring, HCPs must monitor vaccines routinely to ensure that they are always strictly stored within cold chain temperatures [
24]. HCPs must also acquaint themselves with vaccine administration techniques in order not to inflict unnecessary pain on vaccinees, and for vaccine products to elicit their desired immunological response. Poor vaccination techniques are also a potential cause of AEFIs and must be avoided by HCPs. The WHO recommends that for children less than 15 months of age, the deltoid injection site (upper arm) should not be used when administering the inactivated polio vaccine because of the inadequate muscle mass at that age [
25]. The injection of lean and undeveloped infant deltoid muscles could lead to pain, injury and abscess at the injection site, which are all classified as AEFIs; injection into the thigh muscle is therefore preferred. Moreover, the vast majority of vaccines are administered via the intramuscular route, and best vaccination practice requires that the site of intramuscular administration is stretched if the vaccine is given as an injection dosage form, in order to reduce pain, redness, and the risk of abscess formation after injection [
17,
26]. Furthermore, HCPs must be educated to stop certain practices which also reduce the efficacy of vaccines, as the lack of the desired effect of a vaccine is a serious vaccine pharmacovigilance issue. A classic example is the administration of analgesics such as ibuprofen and paracetamol before and around the time of administration of vaccines, with the intention of reducing pain, fever, and inflammation associated with immunization [
27]. Studies have shown that such practices could interfere with the body’s antibody response to the antigenic agent in the vaccines, reducing their ability to prevent the multiplication of the disease causing organisms being targeted [
28]. However, post vaccination administration of anti-pyretics, according to a systematic review, reduces fever associated with vaccination and does not interfere with the antibody response needed for disease prevention [
29]. An exception to this principle is the recommendation to give paracetamol soon after immunization with meningitis B vaccine at 2 and 4 months of age in the UK, rather than waiting for a fever to develop [
30]. This is done because the fever associated with the meningitis B vaccine can be very serious, and can even trigger convulsions [
31].
Apart from improving knowledge of HCPs on AEFIs, negative perceptions towards AEFI reporting must also be done away with. Such negative perceptions include, but are not limited to, believing that reporting an AEFI such as injection abscess will make them feel guilty about having caused harm and been responsible for the event, and believing that combining core clinical duties with AEFI reporting is impossible [
17]. Poor knowledge and negative perceptions among HCPs cut across several fields of healthcare. These have often resulted in negligence of duty which has contributed significantly to many medical liability issues [
32,
33]. Therefore, aside from improving AEFI reporting, high knowledge and positive perceptions about vaccination and AEFIs could help limit immunization negligence and associated medical liabilities.
With the continent of Africa being among the poor regions of the world, reducing its disease burden through wider immunization coverage could save its scarce resources tremendously, making resources available for developmental projects [
34]. Wide vaccine coverage necessitates efforts to mitigate the negative effects of vaccines and immunization exercises in general. Strengthening the pharmacovigilance systems of the African continent is therefore very important in improving AEFI reporting and vaccine safety. Even though African countries such as Swaziland and Mauritius have joined the WHO Pharmacovigilance member countries in the last few years and are at the teething stages in the development of pharmacovigilance, other countries, including South Africa, Tunisia, and Ghana, have been member countries for at least the past 17 years, and have functional national pharmacovigilance systems [
35]. Ghana particularly has a very solid medicines regulatory system, and stands tall among the countries in Africa with rapid development of vaccine pharmacovigilance systems. Ghana therefore serves as an example for other countries in Africa in the nascent stages of pharmacovigilance, or with no pharmacovigilance systems in place to emulate. This study is therefore being conducted in Ghana to ascertain the knowledge and perceptions of healthcare professionals of AEFIs, which will serve as a current indicator of the strength of the vaccine pharmacovigilance system in Ghana. The findings could be used as a framework for policy formulation to help improve the knowledge and perceptions of HCPs as well as their commitment to reporting AEFIs and enhancing vaccine safety in Ghana and Africa at large.
1.1. Study Aim
The aim of the study was to assess the knowledge and perceptions of AEFIs among HCPs in Ghana, with the hope that the findings would improve AEFI awareness elsewhere in Africa.
1.2. Study Objectives
To assess the AEFI knowledge of doctors, pharmacists, and nurses in Ghana.
To assess the AEFI perceptions of doctors, pharmacists, and nurses in Ghana.
To determine the relationship between knowledge of AEFIs and study participants’ characteristics.
To determine the predictors of perceptions towards AEFIs among study participants.
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
The study was of a cross-sectional quantitative design, carried out from 1 July 2017 to 31 December 2017.
2.2. Study Settings
The study was conducted in 4 hospitals in Ghana. The 4 hospitals were selected to ensure that all levels of care, i.e., primary, secondary, and tertiary, were fairly represented in the study participants. One of the hospitals was a primary healthcare (PHC) facility, two were secondary healthcare facilities (SHC), and one was a tertiary healthcare (THC) facility. A PHC facility provides health services for villages and less endowed areas in the community, with a limited presence of medical specialists. A SHC facility is more advanced than a PHC facility and is usually located in bigger towns and peri-urban centers, with some presence of medical specialists to whom cases beyond the scope of PHCs are referred. A THC facility has both medical specialists and consultants in various clinical specialties, and serves as a referral center for both PHC and SHC facilities. Two of the hospitals were situated in the northern belt, and the remaining 2 hospitals in the southern belt. The hospitals in the northern belt were the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH), a 1200 bed THC facility in Kumasi, and the Agogo Presbyterian Hospital (APH), a 200 bed SHC facility, both in the Ashanti region. Those in the southern belt were the Tema General Hospital (TGH), a 300 bed SHC facility in the Greater Accra region, and the Nigale Hospital (NH), a 70 bed PHC facility in the Sekondi-Takoradi metropolis of the western region.
2.3. Subjects/Participants
Subjects in this study were frontline clinical healthcare professionals, i.e., doctors, pharmacists, and nurses in the selected hospitals.
2.4. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
Doctors, pharmacists, and nurses in the selected hospitals who consented to partake in the study were included. Other clinical healthcare professionals apart from these were excluded from the study. Additionally, participants who had worked in the various institutions for less than 6 months were also excluded.
2.5. Sampling
The populations of doctors, pharmacists and nurses in the various hospitals as at the time of the study were as follows: KATH, 1200; APH, 240; TGH, 500; and NH, 30. Assuming a margin of error of 5%, a confidence level of 95%, and a response distribution of 50%, the desired sample sizes for the various hospitals based on their staff populations were as follows: KATH, 292; APH, 148; TGH, 217; and NH, 29, yielding a total sample size of 686. A list of the doctors, pharmacists, and nurses at each of these institutions was used for sampling. Sampling was done based on the proportions of the various cadres of these HCPs against the desired sample population obtained from the sample size calculations for the various institutions, as shown in
Table 1 below. Arithmetic progression was used to sample the desired number of HCPs in each of the hospitals. After the arithmetic progression, 211 doctors, 25 pharmacists, and 450 nurses, yielding a total of 686, was the desired sample size for the study. These HCPs were recruited sequentially at each of the study sites until the desired sample size was reached.
2.6. Data Collection Tool
A structured paper questionnaire was the data collection tool in this study. The tool was prepared by the principal investigator, co-investigators, a public health physician, and a senior nurse at the immunization center of one of the study sites, the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital. Moreover, reference was made in the design of the data collection tool used in a similar study by Masika, Atieli and Were, conducted in Kenya, in the eastern part of Africa, and published in 2016 [
17]. The questionnaire was divided into 3 sections. The first section comprised 6 questions, which were used to collect socio-demographic data, i.e., age, gender, profession, rank, years of practice, and area of practice of participants. There were 12 questions at the second section, which were used to collect data on the AEFI knowledge of participants. Out of these, 1 question assessed general awareness of AEFIs by asking about the definition of AEFI, whereas 9 questions assessed detailed knowledge of AEFIs. The third section comprised 10 questions, which were used to assess the AEFI perceptions of respondents. Altogether there were 3 open-ended questions and 25 closed-ended questions, with all the questions assessing detailed knowledge and perceptions of AEFIs being closed-ended. The rationale for including more closed-ended questions was to enhance response rate, and also to make the analysis easier.
2.7. Pilot Study
The data collection tool was pretested using 3 participants from each of the professional groups, including 1 participant at the various immunization centers within the hospitals. This was done to ascertain the average time taken by respondents to complete a questionnaire, the legibility, clarity, and understanding of study participants. It was discovered from the pilot study that each patient information sheet and questionnaire took an average of 13 min to complete. Data collected was analyzed to observe trends in response to the various questions. The content of the questionnaire was then restructured to improve clarity and understanding of prospective study participants, by addressing all ambiguities and anomalies observed through the responses in the pilot study.
2.8. Data Collection
Data was collected by one assigned research assistant in each of the hospitals. Prospective participants were contacted at their wards, consulting rooms, operating theatres, and immunization centers during working hours (8 a.m. to 5 p.m.) of Monday to Friday of the study period. Prior to administering the questionnaires, each prospective study participant was given a participant information and consent (PIC) form to complete. The PIC form contained the title of the research, name and affiliation of principal investigator, study background and purpose, study procedure, risks and benefits associated with study, voluntariness, and confidentiality of participant data. Participants who needed further clarification and explanations on the PIC form were offered this verbally by the research assistants. It was ensured that participants had written their names and signed their signatures on the designated portions of the PIC forms, after fully comprehending the contents on the forms and agreeing to partake in the study. Participants were given the questionnaires to complete immediately after the consent process.
2.9. Data Analysis
Data was entered and coded periodically into Epi-Data statistical software, after which it was exported to Statistical Package for Social Sciences, IBM
® SPSS version 22 (SPSS Inc., IBM, Armonk, NY, USA) for cleaning and analysis. Descriptive statistics were computed to generate frequencies, means, and standard deviations. General knowledge/awareness of HCPs of AEFIs was ascertained by asking the meaning of the acronym ‘AEFI’. Detailed knowledge of AEFIs was then determined using the set of 9 questions described in
Section 2.6. These questions focused on vaccine product storage, vaccination technique, causes, management, diagnosis, reporting of AEFIs, and prevention and treatment of coincidental conditions following vaccine administration, and were designed such that a ‘yes’ answer was the correct one for each item. Scoring rubrics on AEFI knowledge were determined by the principal investigator and other experts of vaccine pharmacovigilance, as no study was identified in the literature with standard scoring rubrics. A mark of 1 was allotted to each correct answer, and therefore, answering all 9 questions correctly fetched a respondent 9 marks. Participants who scored 8 or 9 marks were deemed to have high knowledge of AEFIs, those scoring 5 to 7 marks were deemed to have moderate knowledge of AEFIs, and those scoring below 5 marks were deemed to have low knowledge of AEFIs. The number of study participants answering ‘yes’ to each of the AEFI knowledge questions was tallied. A two tailed chi-square test was used for tests of association between knowledge of AEFIs and participant characteristics, and
p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Moreover, the set of 10 questions (
Section 2.6) was used to ascertain the HCPs’ perception of AEFIs, with ‘yes’ answers being positive perceptions and ‘no’ answers being negative perceptions. A binary logistic regression test was used to determine associations between the perception of participants (positive or negative) and participant characteristics, and
p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. The summaries of results were presented in tables.
2.10. Ethical Considerations
Permission was sought from the authorities of the various hospitals where the study was conducted. After permission was granted, ethical clearance was obtained from the Committee on Human Research Publication and Ethics (CHRPE) of the School of Medical Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi (Ethical approval number: CHRPE/AP/220/17).
4. Discussion
This study is among only a few conducted on the African continent on knowledge and perceptions of AEFIs among HCPs to include doctors, pharmacists, and nurses, as most of studies have focused on nurses alone [
17,
36].
Over four-fifths of study participants had knowledge of the meaning of the acronym ‘AEFI’. This is an indication of possible awareness about AEFIs among the HCPs. However, based on the scores, detailed knowledge of AEFIs was lacking; only about 10% of study participants were highly knowledgeable about the details of AEFIs, with a vast majority having low to moderate knowledge. High knowledge of the clinical manifestation of AEFIs and their prevention and treatment is beneficial in assuaging the effects of AEFIs during mass vaccine campaigns and routine immunizations, particularly of children below five years of age [
37,
38]. This promotes public trust in vaccines, leading to improved vaccine coverage and reducing the burden of infectious diseases as more people get vaccinated. The low knowledge finding in this study was also observed in a similar study conducted in Albania [
39]. Contrary to the low detailed knowledge of AEFIs found in this study, findings of a similar study conducted in Australia showed very high knowledge of AEFIs among HCPs [
40]. This could be due to the fact that most developed countries, including Australia, are committed to educating their HCPs on AEFIs, compared to the practice in most LMICs. This is, however, disputed by the fact that in a study among HCPs in Europe, only 35% of 26 studied European Union countries had developed training protocols for their HCPs on the identification, prevention, and treatment of AEFIs [
41]. In Ghana, the FDA has intensified the training of both public sector and private sector HCPs on pharmacovigilance over the past few years, in the bid to improve knowledge of the safety of healthcare products, including vaccines. Additionally, the WHO Africa Collaborating Centre for Advocacy and Training in Pharmacovigilance in Ghana has been well equipped over the past 5 years to train HCPs in Ghana and the entire African region in best pharmacovigilance practices, including vaccine pharmacovigilance. Despite these interventions, the current study shows that only 20% of study participants had received official training on AEFIs within the past year. Additionally, there was a statistically significant correlation between the institution an HCP worked at and knowledge of AEFIs, according to the results of tests of association. These indicate the need to intensify training efforts and extend pharmacovigilance training to various regions of the country, to improve coverage of HCPs. A 10-month prospective study conducted in Ghana observed a 600% increase in the reporting rate of AEFIs by HCPs following training, monitoring visits, and provision of AEFI reporting forms to HCPs, lending credence to the need for training intensification [
42]. This is further supported by the relationship between the number of AEFI trainings per year and HCPs’ knowledge of AEFIs, which was statistically significant in the current study. The study also pointed out that pharmacovigilance, and therefore vaccine safety knowledge, is not seriously imparted to doctors, pharmacists and nurses during their professional training in universities and colleges. Over 80% of study participants received no training in vaccine safety in school; future studies should therefore consider assessing the training curricula of these professionals, to investigate the extent to which pharmacovigilance is integrated into their educational curricula.
About 30% of the study participants had interest in investigating and reporting AEFIs. Several factors, such as the cumbersome bureaucratic process of reporting AEFIs, complex data collection tools for AEFIs, and inability to report AEFIs because of busy work schedules, could account for this lack of interest, as has been observed in vaccine and infectious disease research in other African countries [
36,
43]. This was complicated by just a quarter of respondents being willing to learn how to diagnose, report, investigate, and manage AEFIs, even though a vast majority believed in the positive impact of AEFI reporting on building public trust in immunization programs. In mitigating these problems, steps must be taken by regulatory authorities and managers of immunization programs to make reporting easier for HCPs, while ensuring all vital AEFI information is still collected. Other methods, such as using modern technology, could make AEFI reporting easier. For instance, one study has observed that online computer applications enhance the reporting of AEFIs more than paper forms, which were considered cumbersome by many of the study participants [
44]. These web-based computer programs could be developed and simplified as smart phone applications, to make reporting easier and more convenient for HCPs by way of reporting with their smart phones. To give HCPs the confidence to report AEFIs, fears of being blamed and victimized for causing the AEFI must be allayed through sensitization workshops. According to a Zimbabwean study, key among the reasons for negative perception and low reporting of AEFI is the fear of being blamed and victimized after reporting the AEFI [
45]. Results from the current study showed that about three-quarters of study participants believed that reporting an AEFI can lead to such personal consequences; such thoughts and beliefs must therefore be discarded in order to improve AEFI reporting.
The results of the binary logistic regression indicate that HCPs in TGH and NH, the male gender, HCPs in the junior ranks, and HCPs not working in immunization clinics may need more sensitization to improve their positive perceptions about AEFIs. Gender has not been associated with positive attitude to AEFI reporting in other studies on the African continent [
17,
37]. It will therefore be appropriate for future researchers to confirm this finding in other study sites in Africa. However, higher education and higher ranks of HCPs have been associated with positive perceptions towards AEFIs in other studies, as observed in the current study [
46,
47]. As higher ranks within the health industry have mandated managerial tasks, which are associated with extra commitment alongside their core clinical duties, their positive perceptions probably emanated from these managerial duties. An unusual finding of the binary logistic regression test is the fact that there was no significant difference in positive AEFI attitude above 2 trainings per year. This could be attributed to the fact that only the first 2 trainings addressed the needs of the HCPs based on the training material, methodology, and the resource persons employed. This shows that though quantity of training is important, the quality must not be overlooked.
Strengths and Limitations of Study
A major strength of this study is the fact that the study sites consisted of primary, secondary, and tertiary care facilities, making the sample representative of all levels of health care. There are times that vaccine cases are referred from primary healthcare settings to secondary and tertiary facilities for life threatening AEFI management, showing that HCPs’ AEFI knowledge should cut across all levels of care. A major limitation of the study is the exclusion of private healthcare facilities as study sites. Future studies are recommended to include private healthcare facilities, as some vaccines like BCG are given to neonates in these facilities within 24 h of birth, requiring AEFI monitoring by HCPs. This will make the study sample even more representative. Another limitation of the study is the fact that pharmacists were not well represented, as compared to doctors and nurses, because of their low staff strength in the institutions selected as study sites. To estimate the size of statistical effects when comparing characteristics between HCPs, it will be beneficial to recruit more pharmacists in future studies, in order to make an informed decision based on observed differences between these professionals. Moreover, the NH had a very small sample size, which may have also affected the statistical significance of tests of association associated with that facility.