Gust Deborah A, Kennedy Allison, Shui Irene, Smith Philip J, Nowak Glen, Pickering Larry K
Epidemiology and Surveillance Division, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2005 Aug;29(2):105-12. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2005.04.010.
Lack of information has been associated with patient anxiety or concern in a number of healthcare areas.
(1) Identify the proportion of parents who agreed, were neutral, and disagreed that they had access to enough information to make a decision about immunizing their child; (2) examine how parents who agreed and disagreed differed with respect to sociodemographic characteristics, and their attitudes about immunizations, their child's healthcare provider, immunization requirements/exemptions, and immunization policymakers; and (3) identify if differences exist in specific immunization concerns.
A sample of parents with at least one child aged < or =6 years (n=642) was analyzed using data from the HealthStyles survey conducted during July and August 2003. Odds ratios and the Mantel-Haenszel chi-square test were used for analysis.
Response rate for HealthStyles was 69% (4035/5845). The largest proportion of parents agreed they had access to enough information (67%) compared to parents who were neutral (20%) or who disagreed (13%). Compared to parents who agreed, parents who disagreed were more likely to be less confident in the safety of childhood vaccines (odds ratio [OR]=5.4, 95% confidence interval [CI]=3.3-8.9), and to disagree that their child's main healthcare provider is easy to talk to (OR=10.3, 95% CI=3.7-28.1). There was a significant linear trend in the percentage of parents expressing immunization concerns among those who agreed, were neutral, and who disagreed they had access to enough information (p<0.05; df=1).
While most parents agreed that they had access to enough immunization information, approximately a third did not. Perceived lack of information was associated with negative attitudes about immunizations and toward healthcare providers. Basic information about the benefits and risks of vaccines presented by a trusted provider could go a long way toward maintaining and/or improving confidence in the immunization process.
在许多医疗保健领域,信息匮乏与患者的焦虑或担忧有关。
(1)确定同意、持中立态度以及不同意自己已获得足够信息以决定是否为孩子接种疫苗的家长比例;(2)研究同意和不同意的家长在社会人口学特征、对疫苗接种的态度、孩子的医疗保健提供者、疫苗接种要求/豁免以及疫苗接种政策制定者方面的差异;(3)确定在特定的疫苗接种担忧方面是否存在差异。
使用2003年7月和8月进行的健康生活方式调查数据,对至少有一个年龄小于或等于6岁孩子的家长样本(n = 642)进行分析。采用比值比和Mantel-Haenszel卡方检验进行分析。
健康生活方式调查的回复率为69%(4035/5845)。与持中立态度(20%)或不同意(13%)的家长相比,同意自己已获得足够信息的家长比例最大(67%)。与同意的家长相比,不同意的家长更有可能对儿童疫苗的安全性缺乏信心(比值比[OR]=5.4,95%置信区间[CI]=3.3-8.9),并且不同意他们孩子的主要医疗保健提供者易于沟通(OR=10.3,95%CI=3.7-28.1)。在同意、持中立态度以及不同意自己已获得足够信息的家长中,表达疫苗接种担忧的家长比例存在显著的线性趋势(p<0.05;自由度=1)。
虽然大多数家长同意他们已获得足够的疫苗接种信息,但约三分之一的家长并未如此。感知到的信息匮乏与对疫苗接种和医疗保健提供者的负面态度有关。由可信赖的提供者提供关于疫苗益处和风险的基本信息,对于维持和/或提高对疫苗接种过程的信心大有帮助。