| Literature DB >> 23945045 |
Adriana Parrella1, Annette Braunack-Mayer, Michael Gold, Helen Marshall, Peter Baghurst.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare provider spontaneous reporting of suspected adverse events following immunisation (AEFI) is central to monitoring post-licensure vaccine safety, but little is known about how healthcare professionals recognise and report to surveillance systems. The aim of this study was explore the knowledge, experience and attitudes of medical and nursing professionals towards detecting and reporting AEFI.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23945045 PMCID: PMC3751761 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Study participants
| Nurse | 6 | 0 | 31-53 | 19 |
| Paediatric Emergency Department specialist | 6 | 7 | 35-57 | 15 |
| General Practitioner | 8 | 2 | 40-57 | 21 |
Interview topic guide
| 1. Could you tell me about an AEFI you have seen during the course of your work? | |
| 2. How often have you seen an AEFI in this workplace or during your career? | |
| 3. How did you respond to the AEFI? | |
| 4. How did the event turn out? | |
| 1. Have you ever reported an AEFI? Why? | |
| 2. How have you reported? | |
| 3. Was it an easy/difficult process? Could you explain? | |
| 4. If you talked to an authority about the event what was the response from the person? | |
| 5. If you needed to report an AEFI today how would you do it? | |
| 6. What do you think are the main factors that would lead you to report an AEFI? | |
| 7. Why would you report an AEFI? | |
| 8. What would you not report as an AEFI? | |
| 9. What would be your preferred format for reporting? Why? | |
| 1. Can you tell me about whether AEFI are discussed with your colleagues? | |
| 2. Could you describe any policy/protocol for reporting an AEFI in your workplace? | |
| 1. Could you describe your understanding of how vaccines are monitored for safety after they are released to the public? | |
| 2. Who do you think should be responsible for monitoring vaccine safety in Australia? | |
| 3. How do you access communication regarding vaccine safety issues? | |
| 4. Is there sufficient information available to you from surveillance authorities or other sources? Explain. | |
| 5. In your opinion, who should be responsible for monitoring the ongoing safety of vaccines? | |
| 6. What do you think happens after an AEFI report is made? | |
| 7. What is your impression of how safety is monitored? | |
| 1. Could you tell me about any training you have had in vaccine safety either during your career or as a student? | |
| 2. How do you update your knowledge in vaccine safety? | |
| 3. What would be an ideal way to update or provide training? | |
| 4. Do you think doctors and nurses have sufficient training and knowledge in current vaccine safety issues? Why? |
Participants’ awareness of AEFI reporting protocol or policy in their work setting
| If we see an adverse event, then we do report. We have the forms for reporting. (General Practice nurse) | I think I would say that you know the majority that would be 99%, is done by our nurse and would probably only get reported from the nurse | I’d have to double-check. I’d have to ask a colleague |
| I would say there’s one in the policy manual. (General Practice nurse) | No I don’t know that there is one here actually. | We can just click on forms, adverse events reporting form and just print it out, so that’s what we do. |
| The forms are in our filing cabinet. But I know you can get it from SAICU and I know it’s on their website. We’re actually in the process of doing a procedure, protocol. (General Practice nurse) | I would say there wouldn’t be anything completely formal that we’ve ever discussed at a meeting or anything. I don’t think there’s ever been a formal policy. No. | |
| Not actually in writing but because I’m the only one here generally, anything that’s out of the normal goes past me anyway. We always keep a copy of them (the adverse event reporting form) at the clinics. (Council immunisation nurse) | Not that I’m aware of. There may be, but not sure. | I don’t really know because I’ve never had to do it because obviously it’s quite rare. |
| I do the reporting and advise the doctors that I’ve done that as well. If we do any written documentation it’s always scanned into the notes too. (General Practice nurse) | No actually we don’t as far as I know have a policy. Probably we should, but no we don’t. | I would have to look at information on our intranet that has information about reporting adverse reactions to vaccines and remind myself how to do it. |
| It is in our standard operation procedure that we do have that, if an adverse event occurred, it just says fill in a form. (Council immunisation nurse). | Well our practice nurse looks after all these things and she would report. | I remember looking up a number probably from the Immunisation Handbook. |
| No not specifically. There hasn’t been a designated discussion about what we do about these things when they occur. | I don’t think so. I’m not familiar with a documented protocol as such. | |
| There’s those blue forms. | I’d have to ask one of the other consultants what the procedure was, because I don’t currently know. | |
| Not formal, but we know to report to ADRAC. | We’ve got it on our web on our intranet there’s links to it. The numbers there or you make the notification or you just fill it in and send it off. | |
| I’d have to see what the protocol was, but we haven’t had one for so long | Reporting would not be protocolised. | |
| We’ve got the blue forms. We fill in the blue forms and send them off. | ||
| No, there is no protocol |