Wolff Emily R, Madlon-Kay Diane J
From Department of Family Medicine and Community Health (DJM-K), University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis.
J Am Board Fam Med. 2014 Jul-Aug;27(4):458-64. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2014.04.130275.
In 2011, an outbreak of measles in Minnesota was traced back to an unvaccinated Somali child. The purpose of this project was to (1) ascertain whether Somali parents are more likely than non-Somalis to refuse childhood vaccinations, particularly the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine and (2) determine what factors influence the decision not to vaccinate.
We explored parental perceptions and utilization of vaccines through a survey distributed to a convenience sample of Somali and non-Somali parents of children ≤5 years old in a family medicine clinic in Minneapolis, MN.
A total of 99 surveys were completed, 28% (n = 27) by Somali parents. Somali parents were more likely than non-Somali parents to have refused the MMR vaccine for their child (odds ratio, 4.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-18.0). Most of them refused vaccines because they had heard of adverse effects associated with the vaccine or personally knew someone who suffered an adverse effect. Somali parents were significantly more likely to believe that autism is caused by vaccines (35% vs. 8% of non-Somali parents). Somalis were also more likely to be uncomfortable with administering multiple vaccines at one visit (odds ratio, 4.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-11.9) and more likely to believe that children receive too many vaccines.
Statistically significant differences in perceptions and use of vaccines were reported by Somali and non-Somali participants. Somali parents are more likely to believe that the MMR vaccine causes autism and more likely to refuse the MMR vaccine than non-Somali parents. These beliefs have contributed to an immunization gap between Somali and non-Somali children.
2011年,明尼苏达州的一场麻疹疫情被追溯到一名未接种疫苗的索马里儿童。该项目的目的是:(1)确定索马里父母是否比非索马里父母更有可能拒绝给儿童接种疫苗,尤其是麻疹-腮腺炎-风疹(MMR)疫苗;(2)确定哪些因素影响不接种疫苗的决定。
我们通过向明尼阿波利斯市一家家庭医学诊所中5岁及以下儿童的索马里和非索马里父母的便利样本发放调查问卷,来探究父母对疫苗的看法和疫苗使用情况。
共完成了99份调查问卷,其中28%(n = 27)由索马里父母完成。索马里父母比非索马里父母更有可能拒绝为孩子接种MMR疫苗(优势比,4.6;95%置信区间,1.2 - 18.0)。他们中的大多数人拒绝接种疫苗是因为听说过与疫苗相关的不良反应,或者认识有不良反应的人。索马里父母更有可能认为自闭症是由疫苗引起的(35%,而非索马里父母为8%)。索马里人也更有可能对一次接种多种疫苗感到不安(优势比,4.0;95%置信区间,1.4 - 11.9),并且更有可能认为儿童接种的疫苗过多。
索马里和非索马里参与者在疫苗看法和使用方面报告了具有统计学意义的差异。与非索马里父母相比,索马里父母更有可能认为MMR疫苗会导致自闭症,也更有可能拒绝接种MMR疫苗。这些观念导致了索马里和非索马里儿童之间的免疫差距。