A Consent Support Resource with Benefits and Harms of Vaccination Does Not Increase Hesitancy in Parents-An Acceptability Study.
childhood vaccination
consent
consent support resource
information
informed choice
vaccine hesitancy
Journal
Vaccines
ISSN: 2076-393X
Titre abrégé: Vaccines (Basel)
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101629355
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
02 Sep 2020
02 Sep 2020
Historique:
received:
16
07
2020
revised:
14
08
2020
accepted:
25
08
2020
entrez:
5
9
2020
pubmed:
6
9
2020
medline:
6
9
2020
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
It is unclear whether information given about the benefits and risks of routine childhood vaccination during consent may cue parental vaccine hesitancy. Parents were surveyed before and after reading vaccine consent information at a public expo event in Sydney, Australia. We measured vaccine hesitancy with Parent Attitudes about Childhood Vaccine Short Scale (PACV-SS), informed decision-making with Informed Subscale of the Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS-IS), items from Stage of Decision Making, Positive Attitude Assessment, Vaccine Safety and Side Effect Concern, and Vaccine Communication Framework (VCF) tools. Overall, 416 parents showed no change in vaccine hesitancy (mean PACV-SS score pre = 1.97, post = 1.94; diff = -0.02 95% CI -0.10 to 0.15) but were more informed (mean DCS-IS score pre = 29.05, post = 7.41; diff = -21.63 95% CI -24.17 to -18.56), were more positive towards vaccination (pre = 43.8% post = 50.4%; diff = 6.5% 95% CI 3.0% to 10.0%), less concerned about vaccine safety (pre = 28.5%, post = 23.0%, diff = -5.6% 95% CI -2.3% to -8.8%) and side effects (pre = 37.0%, post = 29.0%, diff = -8.0% 95% CI -4.0% to -12.0%) with no change in stage of decision-making or intention to vaccinate. Providing information about the benefits and risks of routine childhood vaccination increases parents' informed decision-making without increasing vaccine hesitancy.
Identifiants
pubmed: 32887503
pii: vaccines8030500
doi: 10.3390/vaccines8030500
pmc: PMC7565597
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Subventions
Organisme : National Health and Medical Research Council
ID : APP1106452
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