Brugha R F, Kevany J P, Swan A V
Department of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK.
Int J Epidemiol. 1996 Aug;25(4):840-5. doi: 10.1093/ije/25.4.840.
Mothers, but not fathers, are the usual focus of strategies to maximize immunization coverage in low income countries.
A study of the immunization determinants of children aged 12-18 months was conducted in 1991 in the Eastern Region of Ghana using structured interviews of a population sample of 294 mothers and 170 (67%) of the children's fathers.
Fathers were more likely than mothers to perceive that the fathers had participated in the decision to send children for immunizations. Where both parents reported that the father had participated in the decision, and he could speak English, the child was more likely to have completed the immunization schedule by 12 months (OR = 5.7, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.5-21.7), independently of other factors. Neither the father's participation, nor his ability to speak English, was independently associated with the child's immunization status.
The results of the study suggest that, where fathers have a higher level of education, programmes which are designed to involve them in decisions about their children's use of preventive health services have the potential to increase timely immunization coverage levels.
在低收入国家,母亲而非父亲通常是提高免疫接种覆盖率策略的重点关注对象。
1991年在加纳东部地区对12至18个月大儿童的免疫接种决定因素进行了一项研究,采用结构化访谈的方式,对294名母亲和170名(67%)儿童的父亲组成的人口样本进行了调查。
父亲比母亲更有可能认为自己参与了送孩子去接种疫苗的决定。当父母双方都表示父亲参与了决定,且父亲会说英语时,孩子在12个月前完成免疫接种计划的可能性更大(比值比=5.7,95%置信区间[CI]:1.5-21.7),不受其他因素影响。父亲的参与以及他说英语的能力,均与孩子的免疫接种状况无独立关联。
研究结果表明,在父亲受教育程度较高的情况下,旨在让他们参与有关子女使用预防性保健服务决策的项目,有可能提高及时免疫接种覆盖率。