| Literature DB >> 35344683 |
Meagan E Miller1, Mahvish Q Rahim2, Scott L Coven2, Seethal A Jacob2, Gregory D Zimet3, Carolyn G Meagher3, Mary A Ott3,4.
Abstract
As of 05/28/2021, SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) had caused 3.9 million infections in the United States (US) pediatric population since its discovery in December of 2019. The development and expansion of vaccination has markedly changed the shape of the epidemic. In this qualitative study, we report on pediatric hematology/oncology provider views on the COVID-19 vaccine prior to approval in the adolescent population <16 years of age. Results from interviews with 20 providers across the state of Indiana showed that most were supportive of the COVID-19 vaccine for healthy adults. However, the majority also expressed a need to see more data on the safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccinations in pediatric hematology/oncology populations. While they recognized the public health importance of vaccination, their duty to protect their patients led to a need for more specific safety and efficacy data.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; COVID-19 vaccines; barriers; hematology/oncology; pediatrics; provider attitudes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35344683 PMCID: PMC9225389 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2022.2048560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 4.526
Figure 1.Provider thought process.
Participant Demographics
| Demographics | n = 20 (%) |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 7 (35%) |
| Female | 13 (65%) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |
| White | 17 (85%) |
| Asian | 0 (0%) |
| Pacific Islander or Native Hawaiian | 0 (0%) |
| Native American or Alaskan Native | 0 (0%) |
| African American | 2 (10%) |
| Latinx/Hispanic | 1 (5%) |
| Other | 0 (0%) |
| Age | |
| 20–30 | 1 (5%) |
| 31–40 | 12 (60%) |
| 41–50 | 5 (25%) |
| 51–60 | 0 (0%) |
| 61–70 | 2 (10%) |
| Focus of practice | |
| General Hematology/Oncology | 4 (20%) |
| Oncology (solid tumor/lymphoma) | 4 (20%) |
| Oncology (CNS tumors) | 2 (10%) |
| Oncology (leukemia) | 1 (5%) |
| Oncology (survivorship) | 2 (10%) |
| Oncology (BMT) | 2 (10%) |
| Hematology (hemoglobinopathies) | 3 (15%) |
| Hematology (hemostasis/thrombosis) | 2 (10%) |
| Years in practicing pediatric Hematology/Oncology | |
| 0–5 | 9 (45%) |
| 6–10 | 4 (20%) |
| 11–20 | 5 (25%) |
| 21+ | 2 (10%) |
Participant quotes
| Model component | Example quote |
|---|---|
| Physician/APP support for COVID19 vaccine | “I think the benefits are huge. I think number one is protection for myself and my family, mainly for myself right now is not being hospitalized and hopefully not having a severe COVID infection.” |
| COVID19 vaccine development | “It was obviously faster than the other vaccines we’ve produced in this country historically, but I think that probably is primarily related to the technology that we now have, which facilitated the development much more quickly.” |
| Physician/APP COVID19 infection concerns | “Eliminating or minimizing the risk of another potential deadly infection, not only to the patient but to their siblings, their grandparents, their parents, their other patients in the clinic, just minimizing their general spread of it.” |
| Physician/APP COVID19 vaccine concerns | “I think mostly that will just be me wanting to see long-term data, long-term safety, outcome, data and outcomes and duration of the immunity that’s provided.” |
| Physician/APP COVID19 vaccine barriers | “It gets back to the general public really doesn’t understand how vaccinations work and what they’re doing. That’s always what I go back to. I’m like if you didn’t have some level of a reaction or some level of response by this where you’re not used to the vaccines, I might be concerned that you haven’t really started that process to build immunity. I explain to them having symptoms for 48 to 72 hours is much different than having something that can hurt you that last well over 14 to 21 days and has … ” |
| Institution- and system level COVID-19 vaccine barriers | “Distribution has not been as quick as we were hoping.” |
| Provider strategy to overcome hesitancy/question | “So, to me the better route to convincing people to be vaccinated is not a cognitive intellectual argument, it’s actually something involving attachment theory. This comes from some current theories, this comes from my spirituality work around, why do people choose one spiritual system over another? It used to be that people said, well, it’s cognitive. If you argue with somebody about the right theology or the right religion, that you would convince them. I think that’s shown that’s done more damage than good. So now in the ethical situation of spiritual care, it’s really important and it’s codified in ethics in medical literature, that we do not proselytize. And yet somebody is in relationship and they’re drawn to certain things and they want to find that out themselves and seek that out, that is acceptable. That’s very powerful, because it comes from that person. What I worry about with some of our attempts at vaccination is that we are setting up medicine as a new religion, in that we are in fact, doing a new form of proselytization. I think that’s similar to how religious proselytization can lead to shame for those that don’t accept or don’t go that way. I think that we could do the same thing for our patients that are that are against vaccination. So, I feel that the best way to open them to the benefits of vaccination are through relationship and through building trust.” |
| COVID19 data | “I mean, from everything I’ve read, it sounds like it’s the benefit of having all of these years of research and how to effectively vaccinate people that they didn’t have 100 years ago during the influenza pandemic back then. (re:MRNA).” |