PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL
Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 2
THE QUALITATIVE STUDY OF COVID-19 VACCINATION IN PREGNANT WOMEN USING THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR
Dublin Core
Title
PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL
Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 2
THE QUALITATIVE STUDY OF COVID-19 VACCINATION IN PREGNANT WOMEN USING THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR
Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 2
THE QUALITATIVE STUDY OF COVID-19 VACCINATION IN PREGNANT WOMEN USING THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR
Subject
covid-19; pregnant women; theory of planned behavior; vaccination
Description
Pregnant women are at risk for COVID-19 or other infectious diseases. Research reports that COVID
infection in pregnant women has a mortality prevalence of up to 3%. Given the seriousness of this disease,
high and evenly distributed vaccination coverage throughout the region is imperative in order to form herd
immunity. The purpose of this study was to determine the reasons for refusal and acceptance of COVID-19
vaccination in pregnant women. This research is a qualitative analytical research using a phenomenological
study approach. This research was conducted by Lebak Wangi Health Center, Serang City in May 2023.
The total author used 8 respondents consisting of: 2 pregnant women who had been vaccinated, 4 pregnant
women who refused to be vaccinated, and 2 triangulators. Data validity will use triangulation and peer
debriefing methods. Behavioral belief in pregnant women who receive vaccinations is to have the right
information. Meanwhile, respondents who refuse vaccination are believing false information (hoaxes) about
vaccines. The subjective norm held by respondents to refuse vaccines is an order from the husband or
parents. The reasons cited for control belief include seeing their child sick when vaccinated or seeing family
members, neighbors and close associates who report vaccine side effects such as fever, dizziness, and mild
flu.
infection in pregnant women has a mortality prevalence of up to 3%. Given the seriousness of this disease,
high and evenly distributed vaccination coverage throughout the region is imperative in order to form herd
immunity. The purpose of this study was to determine the reasons for refusal and acceptance of COVID-19
vaccination in pregnant women. This research is a qualitative analytical research using a phenomenological
study approach. This research was conducted by Lebak Wangi Health Center, Serang City in May 2023.
The total author used 8 respondents consisting of: 2 pregnant women who had been vaccinated, 4 pregnant
women who refused to be vaccinated, and 2 triangulators. Data validity will use triangulation and peer
debriefing methods. Behavioral belief in pregnant women who receive vaccinations is to have the right
information. Meanwhile, respondents who refuse vaccination are believing false information (hoaxes) about
vaccines. The subjective norm held by respondents to refuse vaccines is an order from the husband or
parents. The reasons cited for control belief include seeing their child sick when vaccinated or seeing family
members, neighbors and close associates who report vaccine side effects such as fever, dizziness, and mild
flu.
Creator
Ai Herliani, Novita
Source
http://jurnal.globalhealthsciencegroup.com/index.php/PICNHS
Publisher
Global Health Science Group
Date
July - December 2023
Contributor
PERI IRAWAN
Format
PDF
Language
ENGLISH
Type
TEXT
Files
Citation
Ai Herliani, Novita, “PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL
Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 2
THE QUALITATIVE STUDY OF COVID-19 VACCINATION IN PREGNANT WOMEN USING THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 4, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2743.
Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 2
THE QUALITATIVE STUDY OF COVID-19 VACCINATION IN PREGNANT WOMEN USING THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 4, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2743.