Department of Pediatrics, Center for Pediatric Clinical Effectiveness & PolicyLab, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Department of Population and Family Health, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Hum Vaccin Immunother. 2020 May 3;16(5):1070-1077. doi: 10.1080/21645515.2019.1707006. Epub 2020 Feb 4.
To receive adequate protection against influenza, some children 6 months through 8 y old need two doses of influenza vaccine in a given season. Currently, only half of those receiving the first dose receive a second. Our objective was to assess vaccine hesitancy and influenza disease and vaccine knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs among caregivers of children who received the first of their two needed doses. As part of a national-randomized control trial of second dose text-message influenza vaccine reminders (2017-2018 season), a telephone survey collected caregiver and index child demographic information. Each child had received the first of two needed influenza vaccine doses. Caregivers completed a measure of general vaccine hesitancy - the five-question Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey Tool (PACV-5) - and questions about influenza infection and vaccine. We assessed associations between participant demographic characteristics, vaccine hesitancy, and influenza beliefs and calculated the standardized proportion of caregivers endorsing each outcome using logistic regression. Analyses included responses from 256 participants from 36 primary care practices in 24 states. Some caregivers (11.7%) reported moderate/high vaccine hesitancy and many had misperceptions about influenza disease and vaccine. In multivariable models, no single variable was consistently associated with inaccurate knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs. These results demonstrate that caregivers whose children received the first dose of influenza vaccine may still be vaccine hesitant and have inaccurate influenza beliefs. Pediatricians should consider broadly addressing inaccurate beliefs and promoting vaccination even after caregivers agree to the first dose.
为了获得充分的流感保护,6 个月至 8 岁的一些儿童在一个季节内需要接种两剂流感疫苗。目前,只有一半接种第一剂的人会接种第二剂。我们的目的是评估接受了两剂所需剂量之一的儿童的看护者对疫苗犹豫和流感疾病以及疫苗知识、态度和信念。作为第二项剂量短信流感疫苗提醒(2017-2018 季节)的全国随机对照试验的一部分,电话调查收集了看护者和索引儿童的人口统计学信息。每个孩子都接受了两剂所需流感疫苗中的第一剂。看护者完成了一项一般性疫苗犹豫的测量工具 - 父母对儿童疫苗态度调查工具(PACV-5)的五个问题 - 以及关于流感感染和疫苗的问题。我们评估了参与者人口统计学特征、疫苗犹豫和流感信念之间的关联,并使用逻辑回归计算了每个结果的看护者认可的标准化比例。分析包括来自 24 个州的 36 个初级保健实践中的 256 名参与者的回答。一些看护者(11.7%)报告了中度/高度疫苗犹豫,并且许多人对流感疾病和疫苗存在误解。在多变量模型中,没有一个单一变量始终与不准确的知识、态度和信念相关。这些结果表明,其子女已接种第一剂流感疫苗的看护者可能仍对疫苗犹豫不决,并且对流感的信念存在错误。儿科医生应该考虑广泛解决不准确的信念,并在看护者同意接种第一剂后促进疫苗接种。