Publication | Closed Access
Misperceptions About Influenza Vaccination Among Parents of Healthy Young Children
83
Citations
34
References
2007
Year
Flu VaccinationVaccine HesitancyInfluenza VaccinesPreventive MedicinePediatric EpidemiologyImmunization BarriersHealth CommunicationVaccine SurveillanceHealthy Young ChildrenPublic HealthVaccinologyVaccine SafetyPopulation ChildrenMedicineInfluenza Immunization RateEpidemiologyChild DevelopmentVaccinationPediatricsVaccine EfficacyYoung ChildrenInfluenza VaccinePrecision Vaccinology
A survey was administered to 828 parents from metropolitan Denver, Colorado, and 57% responded. Of the respondents, 47% thought their child was unlikely to contract influenza, 70% thought influenza vaccine could cause influenza, and 21% considered influenza vaccination unsafe for a 1-year-old child. The influenza immunization rate in children of surveyed parents was 71%. In multivariate analyses, the perception that influenza vaccination was the social norm was positively associated with immunization (odds ratio [OR], 1.32; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.03-1.69), and anticipating immunization barriers was negatively associated with immunization (OR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.49-0.95). Parents of young children hold a number of misperceptions about influenza disease and vaccination. Despite this, high immunization rates are achievable in this population.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1