King Catherine, Leask Julie
National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Locked Bag 4001, 2145, Westmead, NSW, Australia.
Discipline of Child and Adolescent Health, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, The Children's Hospital at Westmead Clinical School, Locked Bag 4001, 2145, Westmead, NSW, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2017 Jan 23;17(1):106. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4032-2.
Vaccine safety scares can undermine public confidence in vaccines and decrease immunisation rates. Understanding and addressing parental concerns arising during such scares can assist in lessening their impact. In Australia in April 2010 there was a temporary suspension of influenza vaccine for children under 5 years of age after reports of an increase in the rate of adverse events following vaccination. This qualitative study aimed to explore the impact of the vaccine suspension on parental knowledge, attitudes, trust, information needs, and intent related to influenza vaccination and broader immunisation programs.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 25 parents of children attending childcare centres in Sydney, Australia, between June 2010 and May 2011. Centres were selected to include parents from a range of socioeconomic backgrounds. Interview transcripts were coded and analysed using an approach informed by grounded theory.
Findings indicated that, for those who recalled the vaccine suspension, there was a lasting sense of uncertainty and confusion and a perceived lack of information. Parents had distinct information needs following the vaccine suspension, especially in regards to vaccine safety, testing and recommendations. For many, influenza vaccination intent was conditional on receipt of information from a trusted, authoritative source allaying safety concerns. Importantly, the impact of the scare was contained to influenza vaccines only, and not other vaccine programs.
Parental concerns and information gaps following a vaccine safety scare need to be actively addressed. We provide policy and practice suggestions for proactively managing such incidents, particularly in relation to communication of timely, targeted information to parents and immunisation providers.
疫苗安全恐慌可能会削弱公众对疫苗的信心并降低免疫接种率。理解并解决此类恐慌期间出现的家长担忧,有助于减轻其影响。2010年4月,澳大利亚因报告接种疫苗后不良事件发生率上升,暂时停用了5岁以下儿童的流感疫苗。这项定性研究旨在探讨疫苗停用对家长关于流感疫苗接种及更广泛免疫规划的知识、态度、信任、信息需求和意向的影响。
2010年6月至2011年5月期间,对澳大利亚悉尼参加儿童保育中心的25名儿童的家长进行了半结构化访谈。选择的中心包括来自不同社会经济背景的家长。访谈记录采用扎根理论方法进行编码和分析。
研究结果表明,对于那些记得疫苗停用的人来说,存在一种持续的不确定感和困惑感,以及信息匮乏的感觉。疫苗停用后,家长有明确的信息需求,特别是在疫苗安全、检测和建议方面。对许多人来说,流感疫苗接种意向取决于从可信赖的权威来源获得消除安全担忧的信息。重要的是,恐慌的影响仅局限于流感疫苗,而非其他疫苗项目。
疫苗安全恐慌后家长的担忧和信息差距需要得到积极解决。我们为主动管理此类事件提供了政策和实践建议,特别是在及时向家长和免疫接种提供者传达有针对性的信息方面。