| Literature DB >> 34435544 |
Pierre Bakhache1, Vijay Yewale2, Raunak Parikh3, Gabriella Clancey4, Gemma Spickernell4, Valérie Berlaimont5, Elisa Turriani5.
Abstract
Diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP) combination vaccines are a cornerstone of infant vaccinations worldwide. DTP vaccine acceptance could be impacted by sub-optimal relationships between parents and healthcare professionals (HCPs). This survey, conducted in France and India between 14/2/2020 and 26/3/2020, aimed to understand perspectives and expectations of parents and HCPs toward DTP vaccination. Participants were parents (parents/guardians of ≤3-year-old children; France: n = 1002, India: n = 1021) and HCPs (general practitioners/pediatricians initiating DTP vaccination; France: n = 300; India: n = 300) who chose to take part. A representative sample of parents was achieved via quotas and random iterative weighting to match key demographics of the target population. In India, only parents from socio-economic classes A/B/C and private HCPs were included. Whilst DTP vaccine acceptance was high among parents in France (85%) and India (98%), French HCPs overestimated parental acceptance (99% thought parents were very/fairly accepting). The proportions of parents reporting that the HCP is someone they trust versus the proportions of HCPs wanting to be seen as trusted were discrepant in France (76% versus 90%) but not India (83% versus 85%). Some surveyed parents indicated that, ideally, they would like some input in vaccine brand decisions alongside HCPs, an opinion shared by some HCPs. In France, short-term experience post-vaccination was more important to parents than HCPs, for whom long-term protection was more important. In India, these aspects were equally important to both. Increased awareness of parents' priorities and concerns regarding DTP vaccination can support HCPs in their discussions with parents and help build trust, which may impact vaccine acceptance.Entities:
Keywords: DTP vaccine; healthcare professional; hexavalent; parent; survey; vaccine acceptance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34435544 PMCID: PMC8920163 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2021.1961468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452
Figure 1.Vaccination acceptance among Indian and French parents and HCPs’ perceptions of vaccination acceptance among parents (general practitioners and pediatricians in France and pediatricians in India).
Figure 2.Perception of parental trust in HCPs among parents and HCPs (a) and HCP attitudes toward how they are perceived (b).
Figure 3.Agreement of parents and HCPs on the importance of acknowledging and discussing parental concerns.
Figure 4.Importance of different stages of the vaccination journey for parents and HCPs (proportion of participants rating the stages as essential or very important) in India (a) and France (b).
Figure 5.Parent awareness of vaccine types and brands according to parents and HCPs (a) and involvement of parents in vaccine brand discussions (b).
Figure 6.Frequency of vaccine brand discussions (A) and current versus ideal distribution of responsibility for vaccine brand decision between parents and HCPs (B).
Figure 7.The importance of different aspects that an HCP may or may not consider when choosing a brand of DTP combination vaccine according to parents and HCPs in India and France.
Characteristics of parentsa participating in the study
| Achieved sample size, n (%) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | India | France |
| Female | 663 (65) | 653 (65) |
| Male | 358 (35) | 347 (35) |
| In another way/Prefer not to say | 0 (0) | 2 (0) |
| Farmers | N/A | 14 (1) |
| Independent professions | 94 (9) | |
| Senior executives | 245 (25) | |
| Managerial and technical | 267 (27) | |
| Employees or workers | 325 (32) | |
| Retired or no professional activity | 56 (6) | |
| A | 334 (33) | N/A |
| B | 370 (36) | |
| C | 317 (31) | |
| 18 − 24 years | 156 (15) | 88 (9) |
| 25 − 34 years | 678 (66) | 498 (50) |
| ≥35 years | 187 (18) | 416 (41) |
| 0 − 2 months | 71 (7) | 159 (16) |
| 3 − 11 months | 254 (25) | 308 (31) |
| 12 − 36 months | 716 (71) | 685 (68) |
| Main responsibility | 710 (63) | 651 (53) |
| Shared responsibility | 359 (32) | 553 (45) |
| No responsibilityb | 12 (1) | 18 (1) |
| Prefer not to sayb | 44 (4) | 8 (1) |
aParticipants included in the category “parents” are parents or guardians (stepparents, foster parents and individuals with main or shared responsibility for health-related decisions) of children ≤3 years old.
bRespondents selecting ‘No responsibility’ or ‘Prefer not to say’ were those with more than one child aged ≤3 years old, who had selected main/shared responsibility for another child to be eligible to participate and would have been asked about the child they had responsibility for within the survey.
n (%), number and percentage of parents belonging to each of the defined categories; N/A, not applicable; SEC, socio-economic class (based on the classification system in India, defining classes A1–E13); QS, refers to question numbers as detailed in the Supplementary material.
Characteristics of HCPs participating in the study
| Achieved sample size, n (%) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | India | France |
| General practitioner | 0 (0) | 165 (55) |
| Pediatriciana | 300 (100) | 135 (45) |
| ≤5 | 49 (16) | 16 (5) |
| 6 − 10 | 57 (19) | 30 (10) |
| 11 − 20 | 142 (47) | 75 (25) |
| >20 | 52 (17) | 179 (60) |
aOnly pediatricians from private practices were surveyed in India.
HCPs, healthcare professionals; n (%), number and percentage of HCPs belonging to each defined category; QS, refers to question numbers as detailed in the Supplementary material.