| Literature DB >> 29202798 |
Alies van Lier1, José A Ferreira2, Liesbeth Mollema3, Elisabeth A M Sanders3,4, Hester E de Melker3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: For the decision-making process regarding introduction of new vaccines into the National Immunisation Programme (NIP), advance insight into the potential acceptance among the population is relevant. We studied the intention of parents to have their child vaccinated against four diseases not currently covered by the NIP in the Netherlands. The results on varicella have been published before; this article adds the results on vaccination against rotavirus gastroenteritis, meningococcal B disease, and seasonal influenza.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptance; Epidemiology; Meningococcal B disease; Rotavirus; Seasonal influenza; Vaccination; Varicella
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29202798 PMCID: PMC5716237 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-017-3004-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Intention (mean score) of parents to vaccinate their child against varicella, rotavirus gastroenteritis, meningococcal B disease, and seasonal influenza if the vaccine is included in the National Immunisation Programme (NIP) free of charge versus self-payment outside the NIP
Fig. 2Opinion of parents on statements (mean score) regarding vaccination against varicella, rotavirus gastroenteritis, meningococcal B disease, and seasonal influenza
Fig. 3Importance of questionnaire statements in predicting the intention to vaccinate (divided into positive, neutral or negative intention) against varicella, rotavirus gastroenteritis, meningococcal B disease, and seasonal influenza. The Mean Decrease in Accuracy of a given predictor variable (questionnaire statement) is the decrease in the proportion of correct predictions regarding the outcome (intention to vaccinate) that results from randomly permuting the values of that variable in the dataset