| Literature DB >> 23271490 |
P Bakhache1, C Rodrigo, S Davie, A Ahuja, B Sudovar, T Crudup, M Rose.
Abstract
The New Vaccinations of Infants in Practice online survey in seven countries evaluated vaccination-related attitudes and concerns of parents of infants and health care providers (HCPs) who provide pediatric medical care. The survey showed that HCPs and parents were open to adding new vaccines to the immunization schedule, even if it requires co-administration with current vaccines or introduction of new office visits. Parental disease awareness campaigns would be helpful to achieve widespread acceptance of changes to vaccination schedules. In addition, HCPs would ideally provide disease education to parents to accompany recommendations for a new vaccine.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23271490 PMCID: PMC3606510 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-012-1904-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Number of parents and number and types of HCPs surveyed in each country
| Australia | Canada | France | Germany | Spain | Sweden | UK | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parents | 201 | 445 | 402 | 403 | 402 | 203 | 404 | 2,460 |
| Total HCPs | 105 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 80 | 140 | 725 |
| General practitioner | 90 | 20 | 20 | 20 | – | 38 | 70 | 258 |
| Pediatrician | – | 80 | 80 | 80 | 100 | 41 | – | 381 |
| Nurse | 15 | – | – | – | – | 1 | 70 | 86 |
Overall, HCPs had a close gender split (female, 55 %; male, 45 %), with a mean age of 48 years, practiced medicine for a mean of 17.1 years, spent 91 % of their professional time in direct patient care, were primarily in group rather than solo practice (63 vs. 37 %), spent most of their time in a private office setting (87 %), treated a mean of 467 patients per month (48 % between birth and 24 months), and virtually all (99 %) recommended vaccines according to the official national schedule
Overall, parents were predominately female (71 %) with a mean age of 34 years, had a mean of four people per household and two children <18 years. Approximately 62, 33, and 11 % of parents with the first, second, and third child, respectively, between ages 0–23 months; 56 and 44 % of parents were either entirely responsible or closely involved in vaccination decisions for their youngest child, and all parents reported that their child had received/planned to receive at least one vaccine (100 %)
Fig. 1Typical reaction of parents to the doctor’s recommended vaccination schedule
Fig. 2Summary of general parental beliefs regarding childhood vaccines (N = 2,460)
Fig. 3Maximum number of vaccine injections parents were comfortable with their child receiving during a single medical visit
Fig. 4Summary of general beliefs of HCPs with respect to pediatric vaccines