| Literature DB >> 28838166 |
Iria Preza1, Saleena Subaiya2,3, Jennifer B Harris3, Daniel C Ehlman3, Kathleen Wannemuehler3, Aaron S Wallace3, Shahin Huseynov4, Terri B Hyde3, Erida Nelaj1, Silvia Bino1, Lee M Hampton3.
Abstract
Background: Albania introduced inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) into its immunization system in May 2014, increasing the maximum recommended number of injectable vaccines given in a single visit from 2 to 3.Entities:
Keywords: Albania; IPV; inactivated polio vaccine; multiple injections; vaccine acceptance; vaccine administration
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28838166 PMCID: PMC5853421 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiw570
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Figure 1.Time from birth to vaccination with first (n=1068) and second (n=726) doses of inactivated polio vaccine, pentavalent vaccine, or pneumococcal conjugate vaccine from retrospective record review.
Demographic Characteristics of Interviewed Caregivers of Children and Health-Care Providers
| Demographics of Caregivers | N (%) N=288a |
|---|---|
| Age in years | |
| ≤20 | 17 (6%) |
| 21–25 | 83 (29%) |
| 26–30 | 116 (41%) |
| 31–35 | 41 (14%) |
| 36–40 | 15 (5%) |
| ≥41 | 13 (5%) |
| Education | |
| No education | 2 (1%) |
| Primary (some or completed) | 121 (42%) |
| Secondary | 85 (30%) |
| University | 77 (27%) |
| Number of children in household | |
| 1 | 133 (46%) |
| 2 | 103 (36%) |
| ≥3 | 51 (18%) |
| Relationship to child | |
| Mother | 278 (97%) |
| Father | 3 (1%) |
| Grandparent | 7 (2%) |
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| Position | |
| Staff nurses | 54 (93%) |
| Auxiliary nurse midwife | 4 (7%) |
| Years worked as vaccinator | |
| <1 year | 9 (16%) |
| 1–5 years | 10 (17%) |
| 6–10 years | 3 (5%) |
| >10 years | 36 (62%) |
|
| |
| Urban | 10 (17%) |
| Rural with daily immunization sessions | 13 (22%) |
| Rural with nondaily immunization sessions | 35 (60%) |
aDue to missing data, for age and education, N=285; for number of children in household, N=287.
Caregivers’ Comfort Level With Multiple Injections
| Maximum Number of Vaccine Injections During 1 Visit That Respondent is Comfortable With Their Child Receiving | All Caregivers | Caregivers Whose Children Received 3 Vaccines at 1 Visit (N=206) | Caregivers Whose Children Did Not Receive 3 Vaccines at 1 Visit (N = 81) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 or 2 injections | 200 (70%) | 131 (64%) | 69 (85%) |
| 3 or more injections | 33 (12%) | 32 (16%) | 1 (1%) |
| Whatever my health-care provider recommends | 54 (19%)b | 43 (21%)b | 11 (14%) |
aResponse not collected for 1 caregiver on this question.
bDue to rounding percentages presented, does not add up to 100.
Health-Care Providers’ Comfort Level With Multiple Injections
| Maximum Number of Vaccine Injections During 1 Visit That Health-Care Provider Is Comfortable Administering | All Health-Care Providers (N=58) | Health-Care Providers That Came From a Health Facility Where >90% of Children Received 3 Injections at 1 Visit (N=27) | Health-Care Providers That Came From a Health Facility Where ≤90% of Children Received 3 Injections at 1 Visit (N=31) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 injection | 4 (7%) | 2 (7%) | 2 (6%) |
| 2 injections | 32 (55%) | 11 (41%) | 21 (68%) |
| 3 or more injections | 22 (38%) | 14 (52%) | 8 (26%) |
Health-Care Provider and Caregivers’ Perceptions Regarding Immunizations and Multiple Injections
| Questions | % Caregivers Who Agree N = 288a | % Health-Care Providers Who Agree N = 58a |
|---|---|---|
| Children get more vaccinations than are necessaryb | 55 (19%) | 7 (12%) |
| Immunizations do more good than harm | 279 (98%) | 58 (100%) |
| Many of the illnesses which vaccinations prevent are severe | 282 (99%) | 56 (97%) |
| It is better for a child to receive more injectable vaccines at a single visit if it means that they will be better protected against diseases | 186 (65%) | 44 (77%) |
| There will be fewer side effects if a child receives 1 injectable vaccine in multiple separate visits rather than multiple injections in a single visit | 129 (45%) | 16 (28%) |
| Parents should be allowed to selectively choose the vaccines which they believe their children needs | …c | 5 (9%) |
aPercentages may vary due to number of respondents who answered each question.
b“Strongly agree” and “agree” were combined. Percentages may vary due to number of respondents who answered each question.
cThis question was not asked of caregivers.