| Literature DB >> 21495195 |
Imre Rurik1, Zoltán Langmár, Hajnalka Márton, Eszter Kovács, Endre Szigethy, István Ilyés.
Abstract
AIM: To evaluate the knowledge, motivation, and attitudes of Hungarian family physicians toward pandemic influenza vaccination in the 2009/10 influenza season.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21495195 PMCID: PMC3081211 DOI: 10.3325/cmj.2011.52.134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Croat Med J ISSN: 0353-9504 Impact factor: 1.351
Family physicians’ (n = 198) estimation of pandemic threat for different populations
| Threat of pandemic influenza for the population in | No (%) of physicians who answered the question | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| extreme | serious | medium | moderate | none | |
| the whole world | 18 (9.1) | 83 (41.9) | 71 (35.9) | 26 (13.1) | 0 |
| Hungary | 11 (5.6) | 74 (37.4) | 76 (38.4) | 37 (18.7) | 0 |
| your practice | 5 (2.5) | 55 (27.8) | 82 (40.9) | 51(25.8) | 5(2.5) |
Family physicians’ (n = 198) opinion on preventive measures, media publicity, and how informed the general public and physicians are of influenza
| Question | No. (%) of physicians who answered the question |
|---|---|
| What is the best way to prevent the pandemic influenza more effectively?* | |
| vaccination | 170 (86.1) |
| closing borders | 5 (2.5) |
| local quarantine | 5 (2.5) |
| hygienic regulations | 75 (38.0) |
| How proportional is the media publicity to the real danger? * | l |
| proportional | 25 (12.6) |
| too big | 134 (67.7) |
| prompted by the pharmaceutical companies | 42 (21.2) |
| too small | 5 (2.5) |
| How informed is the Hungarian population about the danger of influenza? | |
| sufficiently | 25 (12.6) |
| partially | 83 (41.9) |
| poorly | 77 (38.9) |
| uninformed | 13 (6.6) |
| How informed are the Hungarian family physicians’ about the danger of influenza? | |
| sufficiently | 90 (45.4) |
| partially | 77 (38.9) |
| poorly | 31 (15.7) |
| uninformed | 0 |
*More than one answer was possible.
Family physicians’ (n = 198) opinions on the contribution of different institutions to the vaccination campaign*
| Question | No. (%) of physicians who answered the question |
|---|---|
| From whom did the physicians get the most useful information? | |
| Ministry of Health | 33 (16.7) |
| Chief Health Officer | 152 (76.8) |
| Health Insurance Fund | 25 (12.6) |
| media | 74 (37.3) |
| Who should have provided more information to the population? | |
| Ministry of Health | 124 (62.6) |
| Chief Health Officer | 93 (47.0) |
| Health Insurance Fund | 29 (14.7) |
| media | 49 (24.8) |
| Who’s performance was worse than expected? | |
| Ministry of Health | 108 (54.6) |
| Chief Health Officer | 112 (56.6) |
| Primary care staff | 48 (24.2) |
| pharmacists | 6 (3.0) |
| Who should have gotten more tasks in vaccine administration? | |
| Ministry of Health | 110 (55.6) |
| Chief Health Officer | 99 (50.0) |
| Primary care staff | 9 (4.6) |
| pharmacists | 16 (8.1) |
*For all the questions, more than one answer was possible.
Family physicians’ (n = 198) opinion on the administration of vaccination, payment to physicians, and self-vaccination
| Question | No. (%) of physicians who answered the question | |
|---|---|---|
| Was the administration of vaccination: | ||
| proportional | 27 (13.6) | |
| bureaucratic | 116 (58.6) | |
| too complicated | 51 (25.8) | |
| simple | 4 (2.0) | |
| Was the payment to physicians: | ||
| proportional | 79 (40.0) | |
| correct | 71 (35.9) | |
| clearly determined | 48 (24.2) | |
| Self-vaccination against infections: | ||
| pandemic | 154 (77.8) | |
| seasonal | 105 (53.0) | |
| pneumococcal | 7 (3.5) | |
| other | 1 (0.5) | |
| none | 44 (22.2) | |