Yih W Katherine, Lieu Tracy A, Rêgo Virginia H, O'Brien Megan A, Shay David K, Yokoe Deborah S, Platt Richard
Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Boston, MA, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2003 Jun 11;3:20. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-3-20.
The United States is implementing plans to immunize 500,000 hospital-based healthcare workers against smallpox. Vaccination is voluntary, and it is unknown what factors drive vaccine acceptance. This study's aims were to estimate the proportion of workers willing to accept vaccination and to identify factors likely to influence their decisions.
The survey was conducted among physicians, nurses, and others working primarily in emergency departments or intensive care units at 21 acute-care hospitals in 10 states during the two weeks before the U.S. national immunization program for healthcare workers was announced in December 2002. Of the questionnaires distributed, 1,165 were returned, for a response rate of 81%. The data were analyzed by logistic regression and were adjusted for clustering within hospital and for different number of responses per hospital, using generalized linear mixed models and SAS's NLMIXED procedure.
Sixty-one percent of respondents said they would definitely or probably be vaccinated, while 39% were undecided or inclined against it. Fifty-three percent rated the risk of a bioterrorist attack using smallpox in the United States in the next two years as either intermediate or high. Forty-seven percent did not feel well-informed about the risks and benefits of vaccination. Principal concerns were adverse reactions and the risk of transmitting vaccinia. In multivariate analysis, four variables were associated with willingness to be vaccinated: perceived risk of an attack, self-assessed knowledge about smallpox vaccination, self-assessed previous smallpox vaccination status, and gender.
The success of smallpox vaccination efforts will ultimately depend on the relative weight in people's minds of the risk of vaccine adverse events compared with the risk of being exposed to the disease. Although more than half of the respondents thought the likelihood of a bioterrorist smallpox attack was intermediate or high, less than 10% of the group slated for vaccination has actually accepted it at this time. Unless new information about the threat of a smallpox attack becomes available, healthcare workers' perceptions of the vaccine's risks will likely continue to drive their ongoing decisions about smallpox vaccination.
美国正在实施一项计划,为50万名医院医护人员接种天花疫苗。接种是自愿的,目前尚不清楚哪些因素会促使人们接受疫苗接种。本研究的目的是估计愿意接种疫苗的工作人员比例,并确定可能影响他们决策的因素。
2002年12月美国宣布医护人员全国免疫计划前两周,在10个州的21家急症医院对主要在急诊科或重症监护室工作的医生、护士及其他人员进行了调查。共发放问卷若干份,回收1165份,回复率为81%。采用逻辑回归分析数据,并使用广义线性混合模型和SAS的NLMIXED过程对医院内部的聚类情况以及每家医院不同的回复数量进行了调整。
61%的受访者表示他们肯定或可能会接种疫苗,而39%的人尚未决定或倾向于不接种。53%的人认为未来两年美国发生天花生物恐怖袭击的风险为中等或高。4