MacDougall D M, Halperin B A, MacKinnon-Cameron D, Li Li, McNeil S A, Langley J M, Halperin S A
Canadian Center for Vaccinology, Dalhousie University, IWK Health Centre and Nova Scotia Health Authority, Nova Scotia, Canada School of Nursing, St. Francis Xavier University, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Canadian Center for Vaccinology, Dalhousie University, IWK Health Centre and Nova Scotia Health Authority, Nova Scotia, Canada School of Nursing, Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, Canada Department of Pediatrics, Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2015 Sep 29;5(9):e009062. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009062.
Vaccine coverage for recommended vaccines is low among adults. The objective of this study was to assess the knowledge, attitudes, beliefs and behaviours of adults and healthcare providers related to four vaccine-preventable diseases and vaccines (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis, zoster, pneumococcus and influenza).
We undertook a survey and focus groups of Canadian adults and healthcare providers (doctors, nurses, pharmacists). A total of 4023 adults completed the survey and 62 participated in the focus groups; 1167 providers completed the survey and 45 participated in the focus groups.
Only 46.3% of adults thought they were up-to-date on their vaccines; 30% did not know. In contrast, 75.6% of providers reported being up-to-date. Only 57.5% of adults thought it was important to receive all recommended vaccines (compared to 87.1-91.5% of providers). Positive attitudes towards vaccines paralleled concern about the burden of illness and confidence in the vaccines, with providers being more aware of disease burden and confident in vaccine effectiveness than the public. Between 55.0% and 59.7% of adults reported willingness to be vaccinated if recommended by their healthcare provider. However, such recommendations were variable; while 77.4% of the public reported being offered and 52.8% reported being recommended the influenza vaccine by their provider, only 10.8% were offered and 5.6% recommended pertussis vaccine. Barriers and facilitators to improved vaccine coverage in adults, such as trust-mistrust of health authorities, pharmaceutical companies and national recommendations, autonomy versus the public good and logistical issues (such as insufficient time and lack of vaccination status tracking), were identified by both the public and providers.
Despite guidelines for adult vaccination, there are substantial gaps in knowledge and attitudes and beliefs among both the public and healthcare providers that lead to low vaccine coverage. A systematic approach that involves education, elimination of barriers and establishing and improving infrastructure for adult immunisation is required.
成人中推荐疫苗的接种覆盖率较低。本研究的目的是评估成人及医疗服务提供者与四种疫苗可预防疾病及疫苗(白喉-破伤风-百日咳、带状疱疹、肺炎球菌和流感)相关的知识、态度、信念和行为。
我们对加拿大成人及医疗服务提供者(医生、护士、药剂师)进行了一项调查和焦点小组访谈。共有4023名成人完成了调查,62人参加了焦点小组访谈;1167名提供者完成了调查,45人参加了焦点小组访谈。
只有46.3%的成人认为自己的疫苗接种是最新的;30%的人不知道。相比之下,75.6%的提供者报告称自己的疫苗接种是最新的。只有57.5%的成人认为接种所有推荐疫苗很重要(相比之下,提供者的这一比例为87.1%-91.5%)。对疫苗的积极态度与对疾病负担的担忧以及对疫苗的信心并行,提供者比公众更了解疾病负担且对疫苗效果更有信心。55.0%至59.7%的成人报告称,如果医疗服务提供者建议,他们愿意接种疫苗。然而,此类建议各不相同;虽然77.4%的公众报告称医疗服务提供者提供了流感疫苗,52.8%的公众报告称医疗服务提供者建议接种流感疫苗,但只有10.8%的人被提供了百日咳疫苗,5.6%的人被建议接种百日咳疫苗。公众和提供者都指出了提高成人疫苗接种覆盖率的障碍和促进因素,如对卫生当局、制药公司和国家建议的信任-不信任、个人自主权与公共利益以及后勤问题(如时间不足和缺乏疫苗接种状态跟踪)。
尽管有成人疫苗接种指南,但公众和医疗服务提供者在知识、态度和信念方面仍存在重大差距,导致疫苗接种覆盖率较低。需要一种系统的方法,包括教育、消除障碍以及建立和改善成人免疫接种基础设施。