| Literature DB >> 34757024 |
Sean T O'Leary1, Jessica Cataldi2, Megan C Lindley3, Brenda L Beaty4, Laura P Hurley5, Lori A Crane6, Michaela Brtnikova2, Carol Gorman4, Tara Vogt3, Yoonjae Kang3, Allison Kempe2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe, among pediatricians (Peds) and family physicians (FPs), 1) changes made to routine childhood vaccination delivery as a result of the pandemic, and 2) perceived barriers to delivering vaccinations from March 2020 through the time of the survey.Entities:
Keywords: SARS-CoV-2; pandemic; primary care; vaccination.
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34757024 PMCID: PMC8553366 DOI: 10.1016/j.acap.2021.10.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acad Pediatr ISSN: 1876-2859 Impact factor: 2.993
US Primary Care Physician-Reported Suspension of Routine Non-Influenza Pediatric Vaccination During the COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020 (n = 516)
| Age Group | Peds Percent (95% CI) | FM Percent (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| 0–2 year olds | 5% (3%–8%) | 15% (11%–21%) |
| 4–6 year olds | 19% (14%–23%) | 17% (12%–23%) |
| 11–18 year olds | 24% (19%–30%) | 19% (14%–24%) |
US Primary Care Physician-Reported Changes to Clinic Processes Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020 (n = 579)
| Response Option | Peds Percent (95% CI) | FM Percent (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Requiring patients and families to wear a mask or face covering in clinic | 99% (97%–100%) | 99% (97%–100%) |
| Limiting the number of people who accompany a patient to a clinic visit | 97% (94%–98%) | 94% (91%–97%) |
| Changes to the physical space inside the clinic to allow physical/social distancing | 95% (92%–97%) | 96% (93%–98%) |
| Changes to the check-in process to decrease or eliminate time spent in the clinic | 93% (89%–95%) | 96% (93%–98%) |
| Scheduling sick and well visits during different times of day (morning / afternoon) | 71% (65%–76%) | 41% (36%–47%) |
| Giving vaccinations outdoors | 34% (28%– 39%) | 43% (37%–49%) |
| Drive up visits for acute illness | 34% (28%–40%) | 36% (30%–42%) |
| Scheduling sick and well visits at different clinic locations | 33% (27%–39%) | 39% (34%–45%) |
| Advising patients/parents to delay some vaccinations to avoid in-person risk | 10% (6%–14%) | 24% (20%–30%) |
| Scheduling sick and well visits on different days of the week | 4% (2%–7%) | 7% (4%–10%) |
Figure 1US primary care physician-reported barriers to providing routine non-influenza pediatric vaccination during the COVID-19 pandemic, 2020 (n = 579). Some percentages do not add up to 100% due to rounding. Barriers not shown due to fewer than 10% of either specialty reporting as a major or moderate barrier: clinic closed and problems with maintaining vaccine supply. Peds indicates pediatricians; FPs, family physicians.