Skip to main content
. 2022 Jun 4;19(11):6872. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19116872

Table 6.

Predictors of a lack of COVID-19 vaccination among women.

Data Odds Ratio (OR)
(95% Lower—Upper
Confidence Interval (CI))
p-Value
Age (years) 0.96 (0.92–1.00) <0.06
Residence
urban, above 100,000 residents (ref)
urban, 10,000–100,000 residents
urban, <10,000 residents
rural


1.52 (0.98–2.37)
2.06 (1.05–4.02)
1.89 (1.25–2.87)


0.06
<0.04
<0.003
Marital status
married (ref)
cohabiting
single parent & divorced


1.76 (1.15–2.70)
1.00 (0.34–2.94)


<0.009
0.99
Were you afraid of SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy/lactation?
5 (I was DEFINITELY AFRAID) (ref)
4
3
2
1 (I was DEFINITELY NOT AFRAID)


1.90 (1.20–3.02)
4.31 (2.75–6.74)
7.21 (3.84–13.54)
5.84 (3.32–10.27)


<0.007
<0.001
<0.001
<0.001
Did you suffer from COVID-19 during your pregnancy?
No (ref)
Yes
I do not know


2.32 (1.43–3.77)
2.67 (1.66–4.28)


<0.001
<0.001
Is SARS-CoV-2 transmitted through breastfeeding?
No (ref)
Yes
I do not know


2.32 (1.15–4.70)
1.24 (0.82–1.88)


<0.02
0.3
Does breastfeeding protect children from COVID-19?
Yes (ref)
No
I do not know


1.86 (1.13–3.07)
1.08 (0.70–1.67)


<0.02
0.73
Do you think that immunity achieved after COVID-19 vaccination might provide immune protection to the fetus and newborn (placental transfer)?
Yes (ref)
No
I do not know



23.86 (12.99–43.84)
10.77 (7.20–16.10)



<0.001
<0.001

ref—reference category.