Understanding and Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy

Understanding and Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy
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This presentation provides an overview of vaccine hesitancy and offers strategies to address it. It discusses the development of recommendations and schedules by the ACIP committee, as well as the publication of these recommendations in MMWR. It also highlights additional resources from CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

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About Understanding and Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy

PowerPoint presentation about 'Understanding and Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy'. This presentation describes the topic on This presentation provides an overview of vaccine hesitancy and offers strategies to address it. It discusses the development of recommendations and schedules by the ACIP committee, as well as the publication of these recommendations in MMWR. It also highlights additional resources from CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics.. The key topics included in this slideshow are Vaccine hesitancy, ACIP committee, Recommendations, Schedules, MMWR, CDC, American Academy of Pediatrics,. Download this presentation absolutely free.

Presentation Transcript


1. Understanding and Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy Presentation to: Presented by: Date:

2. How Recommendations and Schedules Are Developed: ACIP Committee National committee Membership: Experts in fields of epidemiology and infectious diseases Represent areas of academia, research, and public and private providers Meets 3 times a year Has sole authority to add vaccines to the VFC Program

3. Publication of Recommendations and Schedules MMWR (official notification) Free Subscription per internet: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/mmwrsubscribe.html ACIP Recommendations for each vaccine located at CDC web sites: http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/ACIP-list.htm http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/recs/provisional/default. htm American Academy of Pediatrics licensure chart and recommendations: http://aapredbook.aappublications.org/news/vaccstat us.shtml

4. Recommended Childhood & Adolescent Immunization Schedule - United States Vaccines are listed under the routinely recommended ages for children through age 18 years Sentence under the title For those who fall behind or start late, see the catch-up schedule. Gold bars indicate range of recommended ages for immunization Purple bars indicated vaccines that may be needed by certain high risk groups.

5. Ages 0-6 years Ages 7-18 years 2012 Recommended Childhood and Adolescent Immunization Schedule

6. Vaccine Hesitant Parent Profile Most often, these moms can be defined as: Ages 30-45 College graduates Upper income Planned pregnancy read all the books! Worried about being a good mom Worried about her childrens progress relative to development stages Engaged in mom groups - PEPS, church, daycare Information seekers

7. Vaccine Hesitant Parents Profile WebMD is the most used and influential website, followed by CDC, AAP, Mayo Clinic, and blogs by other parents Listens to NPR, watches Oprah, reads parenting magazines, follows the mommyblogs, etc. Risk adverse Environmentally responsible Health-conscious Organic-food-buying Talks to her family practice doctor does not always get answers and is probably a bit frustrated

8. Parents Who Refuse Vaccines Concerns about vaccine safety Cause harm 69% Overload immune systems 49% Child not at risk for disease 37% Disease not dangerous 21%

9. Belief that vaccine-preventable diseases no longer pose any risk

10. Doubt about the vaccine safety profile What are ingredients? What are side effects? Who has tested them?

11. Belief that multiple vaccines overload the childs immune system

12. Vaccines over the past 100 years Date Vaccine Proteins/Sugars Totals Totals 1900 Smallpox ~200 ~200 1960 Smallpox ~200 ~3,217 Diphtheria 1 Tetanus 1 Whole cell Pertussis ~3,000 Polio 15 1980 Diphtheria 1 ~3,041 Tetanus 1 Whole cell Pertussis ~3,000 Polio 15 Measles 10 Mumps 9 Rubella 5

13. Date Vaccine Proteins/Sugars Totals Totals 2000 Diphtheria 1 133-136 Tetanus 1 Acellular pertussis 2-5 Polio 15 Measles 10 Mumps 9 Rubella 5 Hib 2 Varicella 69 Pneumococcus 8 Hepatitis B 1 Influenza 10 Offit PA, et al. Addressing parents' concerns: Do vaccines weaken or overwhelm the infant's immune system? Pediatrics 2002;109:124-129 .

14. Belief that certain vaccines have been linked to autism

15. Belief that certain ingredients (thimerosal and aluminum salts) in vaccines are dangerous

16. Why Parents Change Their Minds Adapted from D Opel, 2011; Gust et al, Pediatrics, 2008

17. AAA Ask Identify hesitant parents Acknowledge Questions and concerns Advise Answer specific questions

18. Strategies for Communicating with Vaccine-Hesitant Parents Do you have any cultural, religious, or personal belief regarding immunization? Has your child or any child you know has a serious adverse event after an immunization? Do you have any vaccine safety concerns? What vaccine safety information can I provide?

19. HOW TO COUNSEL THE VACCINE-HESITANT PARENT Initiate a dialogue about vaccines early (at the infants first visit) to find any underlying hesitancy or misinformation that can be corrected. Distribute the Vaccine Information Sheets early, usually at the 1-month visit, so parents have time to consider their unspoken questions. Solicit and welcome questions during vaccine visits and take time to listen (make eye contact), dont patronize. Dont get offended and dont offend.

20. HOW TO COUNSEL THE VACCINE-HESITANT PARENT Acknowledge benefits and possible risks. Use clear and simple language. Respect the parents authority and develop the ability to have shared decision making. Have your practice emphasize the reduction of stress and pain of the shots through the use of sucrose and/or swaddling.

21. National Immunization Survey Children 19-35 Months of Age by State

22. Georgia Immunization Study (2010-2011) Reasons for Incomplete Immunizations by 24 months

23. Georgia Immunization Study (2011) Reasons for Incomplete Immunizations by 24 months by WIC Enrollment, 2011

24. Georgia Immunization Study (2010-2011) Reasons for Incomplete Immunizations by 24 months for children of Hispanic mothers, 2010-2011

25. Georgia Immunization Study (2010-2011) Reasons for Incomplete Immunizations by 24 months for children of African American mothers, 2010-2011

26. Georgia Immunization Study (2010-2011) Reasons for Incomplete Immunizations by 24 months for children of white, non-Hispanic mothers, 2010-2011

27. Georgia Immunization Study (2010) Reasons for Incomplete Immunizations by 24 months, race-ethnicity differences, 2010

28. Georgia Immunization Study (2011) Reasons for Incomplete Immunizations by 24 months, race-ethnicity differences, 2011

29. Immunization Rate History National Immunization Survey and Georgia Immunization Study, 2000-2011 *2009 data was not collected due to personnel vacancy

30. Religious Exemptions by District, 2010

31. Georgia Immunization Study (2011) Immunization Rates by Health District, 2011

32. Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) is a national vaccine safety surveillance program co-sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration. What Can Be Reported to VAERS? Who Reports to VAERS? Does VAERS Provide General Vaccine Information? http://vaers.hhs.gov/ or 1-800-822-7967

33. National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP) National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program provides compensation to individuals found to be injured by or have died from certain childhood vaccines. Established in 1988 by NCVIA Federal no fault system to compensate those injured Claim must be filed by individual, parent or guardian Must show that injury is on Vaccine Injury Table

34. Resources Local health department District Immunization Coordinator GA Immunization Program Office On call Help line: 404-657-3158 GRITS Help Line:1-866-483-2958 VFC Help Line:1-800-848-3868 Website http://health.state.ga.us/programs/immunization Your local Immunization Program Consultant (IPC) GA Chapter of the AAP GA Academy of Family Physicians

35. http://health.state.ga.us/prog rams/immunization

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