Salmon Daniel A, Pan William K Y, Omer Saad B, Navar Ann Marie, Orenstein Walter, Marcuse Edgar K, Taylor James, deHart M Patricia, Stokley Shannon, Carter Terrell, Halsey Neal A
Institute for Vaccine Safety and Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
Hum Vaccin. 2008 Jul-Aug;4(4):286-91. doi: 10.4161/hv.4.4.5752. Epub 2008 Feb 19.
Compare vaccine knowledge, attitudes and practices of primary care providers for fully vaccinated children and children who are exempt from school immunization requirements.
We conducted a mailed survey of parent-identified primary care providers from four states to measure perceived risks and benefits of vaccination and other key immunization beliefs. Frequencies of responses were stratified by type of provider, identified by exempt versus vaccinated children. Logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios for responses by provider type.
551 surveys were completed (84.3% response rate). Providers for exempt children had similar attitudes to providers for non-exempt children. However, there were statistically significant increased concerns among providers for exempt children regarding vaccine safety and lack of perceived individual and community benefits for vaccines compared to other providers.
The great majority of providers for exempt children had similar attitudes about vaccine safety, effectiveness and benefits as providers of non-exempt children. Although providers for exempt children were more likely to believe that multiple vaccines weaken a child's immune system and were concerned about vaccine safety and less likely to consider vaccines were beneficial, a substantial proportion of providers of both exempt and vaccinated children have concerns about vaccine safety and believe that CDC underestimates the frequency of vaccine side effects. Effective continuing education of providers about the risks and benefits of immunization and including in vaccine recommendations more information on pre and post licensing vaccine safety evaluations may help address these concerns.
比较初级保健提供者对完全接种疫苗儿童和免于学校免疫要求儿童的疫苗知识、态度和行为。
我们对来自四个州的家长指定的初级保健提供者进行了邮寄调查,以衡量对疫苗接种的感知风险和益处以及其他关键的免疫观念。按提供者类型(根据豁免儿童与接种疫苗儿童区分)对回复频率进行分层。使用逻辑回归计算按提供者类型的回复比值比。
完成了551份调查(回复率84.3%)。豁免儿童的提供者与非豁免儿童的提供者态度相似。然而,与其他提供者相比,豁免儿童的提供者对疫苗安全性以及疫苗缺乏个体和社区益处的担忧在统计学上显著增加。
绝大多数豁免儿童的提供者对疫苗安全性、有效性和益处的态度与非豁免儿童的提供者相似。尽管豁免儿童的提供者更有可能认为多种疫苗会削弱儿童的免疫系统,并且担心疫苗安全性,不太可能认为疫苗有益,但豁免儿童和接种疫苗儿童的提供者中相当大比例的人都担心疫苗安全性,并认为疾病控制与预防中心低估了疫苗副作用的发生率。对提供者进行关于免疫接种风险和益处的有效继续教育,并在疫苗建议中纳入更多关于疫苗许可前和许可后安全性评估的信息,可能有助于解决这些担忧。