| Literature DB >> 35335036 |
Victor Daniel Miron1,2, Andrei Răzvan Toma3, Claudiu Filimon1, Gabriela Bar2, Mihai Craiu1,2.
Abstract
Vaccination is one of the most useful medical interventions for controlling certain infectious diseases. The aim of current research is to identify some of the drivers of vaccine hesitancy or acceptance in a rather skeptical European population by addressing parental perception on optional vaccination (OV) perception. Novel tools, delivered by social media, were used in our research attempt. A validated questionnaire was distributed online among parents. Parental knowledge, attitudes and perceptions of OV were analyzed. The majority of parent respondents (55.1%) showed very good knowledge about vaccination and vaccine-preventable diseases, and 76.0% stated that they had given at least one optional vaccine to at least one of their children. The most common optional vaccine administered was the rotavirus vaccine. The level of knowledge appeared to be related to compliance with OV. Concurrently, the rate of vaccine acceptance in the NIP (National Immunization Program) was not correlated with the level of parental knowledge. In total, a high percentage of parents (77.6%) believed that OV can bring an additional health safety benefit to their children. This study shows the need to involve the medical community in a steady dialogue with parents about OV. Raising awareness by presenting clear and understandable information could be a game-changing intervention in mitigating the public health impact of OV-preventable diseases.Entities:
Keywords: attitudes; children; knowledge; optional vaccine; parents; practices
Year: 2022 PMID: 35335036 PMCID: PMC8955643 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10030404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Demographic characteristics of respondents.
| Characteristic | Number of Respondents, |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| female | 2432 (95.4) |
| male | 118 (4.6) |
| Age (mean in years, ±SD) | |
| all respondents | 36.9 ± 5.3 |
| male | 38.4 ± 5.2 |
| female | 36.8 ± 5.3 |
| Residence | |
| urban | 2268 (88.9) |
| rural | 282 (11.1) |
| Educational level | |
| unfinished general school/without studies | 2 (0.1) |
| completed general school | 6 (0.2) |
| vocational school | 10 (0.4) |
| high school | 146 (5.7) |
| post-high school | 89 (3.5) |
| university studies | 2297 (90.1) |
| Number of children | |
| 1 child | 1398 (54.8) |
| 2 children | 1047 (41.1) |
| 3 children | 93 (3.6) |
| 4 children | 11 (0.4) |
| 5 children | 1 (0.05) |
| Median age of children (median in years, IQR) | |
| first child | 5 (3–9) |
| second child | 4 (2–7) |
| third child | 3 (1–5.3) |
| fourth child | 1 (0.3–4) |
Knowledge score and knowledge rating by respondent characteristics.
| Characteristic | Knowledge Score, Median (IQR) | Statistical Analysis | Knowledge Rating, | Statistical Analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Very good | Good | Sufficient | Insufficient | ||||
| All participants ( | 10 (8.5–11) | NA | 1406 (55.1) | 910 (35.7) | 211 (8.3) | 23 (0.9) | NA |
| Gender | |||||||
| female ( | 10 (8.5–11) | 1359 (55.9) | 866 (35.6) | 190 (7.8) | 17 (0.7) | ||
| male ( | 8.5 (7–10.5) | 47 (39.8) | 44 (37.3) | 21 (17.8) | 6 (5.1) | ||
| Age group | |||||||
| under 30 years ( | 10 (8–11) | 78 (51.3) | 55 (36.2) | 18 (11.8) | 1 (0.7) | ||
| 30–39 years ( | 10 (8.5–11) | 932 (56.5) | 586 (35.5) | 117 (7.1) | 14 (8.4) | ||
| 40 years and over ( | 10 (8.5–11) | 396 (52.9) | 269 (35.9) | 76 (10.1) | 8 (1.1) | ||
| Residence | |||||||
| urban ( | 10 (8.5–11) | 1256 (55.4) | 807 (35.5) | 185 (8.2) | 20 (0.9) | ||
| rural ( | 10 (8–11) | 150 (53.2) | 103 (36.5) | 26 (9.2) | 3 (1.1) | ||
| Educational level | |||||||
| unfinished general school ( | NA | 2 (100) | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| completed general school ( | 8.5 (7.9–9.5) | 0 | 6 (100) | 0 | 0 | ||
| vocational school ( | 9 (5.9–10) | 4 (40.0) | 3 (30.0) | 3 (30.0) | 0 | ||
| high school ( | 8.3 (6.5–10) | 46 (31.5) | 60 (41.1) | 35 (24.0) | 5 (3.4) | ||
| post-high school ( | 9.5 (8.5–11) | 43 (4.8) | 36 (40.4) | 10 (11.2) | 0 | ||
| university studies ( | 10 (8.5–11) | 1311 (57.1) | 805 (35.0) | 163 (7.1) | 18 (0.8) | ||
| Number of children | |||||||
| 1 child ( | 10 (8.5–11) | 745 (53.3) | 530 (37.9) | 115 (8.2) | 8 (0.6) | ||
| 2 children ( | 10 (8.5–11) | 601 (57.4) | 344 (32.9) | 90 (8.6) | 12 (1.1) | ||
| 3 children ( | 10.5 (9–11.5) | 53 (57.0) | 32 (34.4) | 6 (6.5) | 2 (2.1) | ||
| 4 children ( | 10.5 (7.5–11) | 7 (63.6) | 3 (27.3) | 0 | 1 (9.1) | ||
| 5 children ( | NA | 0 | 1 (100) | 0 | 0 | ||
NA—not applicable.
Figure 1Parents’ sources of information on vaccinations.
Figure 2Communicating with your GP or pediatrician about vaccination. Q1. Have you ever discussed with your family doctor/pediatrician about vaccines in the free regimen for your child/children? Q2. Have you ever discussed with your family doctor/pediatrician about optional vaccines that can be given to your child/children?
Figure 3Parental reasons for not using OV in their children. GP—general practitioner; P—pediatrician.
Analysis between the knowledge score, knowledge rating and optional vaccination.
| Knowledge Rating/Knowledge Score | Have You Given at Least One Optional Vaccine to at Least One of Your Children? | Statistical Analysis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes, | No, | ||
| Very good | 1172 (60.5) | 234 (38.2) | |
| Good | 636 (32.8) | 274 (44.7) | |
| Sufficient | 120 (6.2) | 91 (14.8) | |
| Insufficient | 9 (0.5) | 14 (2.3) | |
| Score | 10 (IQR: 9–11.5) | 9 (IQR: 7–10.5) | |
Distribution of optional vaccines administered according to the child’s rank.
| Type of Vaccine | Number of Vaccines Administered | Total, | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st Child | 2nd Child | 3rd Child | 4th Child | ||
| Rotavirus vaccine | 1165 | 500 | 41 | 2 | 1708 (28.1) |
| Varicella vaccine | 945 | 293 | 28 | 1 | 1267 (20.9) |
| Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 (0) |
| Meningococcal vaccine ACYW serogroups | 460 | 125 | 14 | 1 | 600 (9.9) |
| Meningococcal vaccine B serogroup | 316 | 91 | 11 | 0 | 418 (6.9) |
| Live attenuated influenza vaccine | 354 | 107 | 8 | 0 | 469 (7.7) |
| Influenza inactivated vaccine | 834 | 304 | 25 | 1 | 1164 (19.2) |
| Hepatitis A vaccine | 286 | 86 | 8 | 0 | 380 (6.3) |
| I don’t know/I forgot | 34 | 20 | 8 | 0 | 62 (1.0) |
| Total | 4394 | 1526 | 143 | 6 | 6069 (100) |
Figure 4Optional vaccines that parents want to be included in the NIP. RV—rotaviral vaccine, MenACYW—meningococcal vaccine serogroups ACYW, MenB—meningococcal vaccine serogroup B, VAR—varicella vaccine, HepA—hepatitis A vaccine, LAIV4—quadrivalent live attenuated influenza vaccine and IIV4—quadrivalent inactivated influenza vaccine.
Figure 5Diseases preventable by optional vaccination that parents fear one of their children will get sick from.