Handy Lori K, Maroudi Stefania, Powell Maura, Nfila Bakanuki, Moser Charlotte, Japa Ingrid, Monyatsi Ndibo, Tzortzi Elena, Kouzeli Ismini, Luberti Anthony, Theodoridou Maria, Offit Paul, Steenhoff Andrew, Shea Judy A, Feemster Kristen A
Department of Pediatrics, The Sidney Kimmel Medical Center at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Nemours/Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, Delaware, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Aug 3;12(8):e0180759. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180759. eCollection 2017.
Vaccine acceptance is a critical component of sustainable immunization programs, yet rates of vaccine hesitancy are rising. Increased access to misinformation through media and anti-vaccine advocacy is an important contributor to hesitancy in the United States and other high-income nations with robust immunization programs. Little is known about the content and effect of information sources on attitudes toward vaccination in settings with rapidly changing or unstable immunization programs.
The objective of this study was to explore knowledge and attitudes regarding vaccines and vaccine-preventable diseases among caregivers and immunization providers in Botswana, the Dominican Republic, and Greece and examine how access to information impacts reported vaccine acceptance.
We conducted 37 focus groups and 14 semi-structured interviews with 96 providers and 153 caregivers in Botswana, the Dominican Republic, and Greece. Focus groups were conducted in Setswana, English, Spanish, or Greek; digitally recorded; and transcribed. Transcripts were translated into English, coded in qualitative data analysis software (NVivo 10, QSR International, Melbourne, Australia), and analyzed for common themes.
Dominant themes in all three countries included identification of health care providers or medical literature as the primary source of vaccine information, yet participants reported insufficient communication about vaccines was available. Comments about level of trust in the health care system and government contrasted between sites, with the highest level of trust reported in Botswana but lower levels of trust in Greece.
In Botswana, the Dominican Republic, and Greece, participants expressed reliance on health care providers for information and demonstrated a need for more communication about vaccines. Trust in the government and health care system influenced vaccine acceptance differently in each country, demonstrating the need for country-specific data that focus on vaccine acceptance to fully understand which drivers can be leveraged to improve implementation of immunization programs.
疫苗接受度是可持续免疫规划的关键组成部分,但疫苗犹豫率正在上升。通过媒体和反疫苗宣传增加了错误信息的获取,这是美国和其他拥有强大免疫规划的高收入国家中疫苗犹豫的一个重要因素。对于免疫规划快速变化或不稳定的地区,关于信息来源对疫苗接种态度的内容和影响知之甚少。
本研究的目的是探讨博茨瓦纳、多米尼加共和国和希腊的护理人员和免疫接种提供者对疫苗及疫苗可预防疾病的知识和态度,并研究信息获取如何影响报告的疫苗接受度。
我们在博茨瓦纳、多米尼加共和国和希腊对96名提供者和153名护理人员进行了37次焦点小组讨论和14次半结构化访谈。焦点小组讨论用塞索托语、英语、西班牙语或希腊语进行;进行数字录音并转录。转录本被翻译成英语,在定性数据分析软件(NVivo 10,QSR International,墨尔本,澳大利亚)中编码,并分析共同主题。
所有三个国家的主要主题包括将医疗保健提供者或医学文献确定为疫苗信息的主要来源,但参与者报告称关于疫苗的沟通不足。关于对医疗保健系统和政府信任程度的评论在不同地点有所不同,博茨瓦纳报告的信任程度最高,而希腊的信任程度较低。
在博茨瓦纳、多米尼加共和国和希腊,参与者表示依赖医疗保健提供者获取信息,并表明需要更多关于疫苗的沟通。对政府和医疗保健系统的信任在每个国家对疫苗接受度的影响不同,这表明需要专注于疫苗接受度的特定国家数据,以充分了解哪些驱动因素可用于改善免疫规划的实施。