Previsit Screening for Parental Vaccine Hesitancy: A Cluster Randomized Trial

Author:

Opel Douglas J.12,Henrikson Nora3,Lepere Katherine1,Hawkes Rene3,Zhou Chuan12,Dunn John3,Taylor James A.2

Affiliation:

1. Seattle Children’s Research Institute, Seattle, Washington;

2. Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; and

3. Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle, Washington

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of vaccine hesitancy screening on childhood vaccine uptake. METHODS: We conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial in pediatric primary care clinics in Washington state. Vaccine-hesitant parents (VHPs) with a healthy newborn receiving health supervision at participating clinics were eligible. VHPs were identified by using a 4-item version of the validated Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey (PACV). Before their child’s 2- and 6-month health supervision visits, VHPs at intervention clinics completed the 15-item PACV embedded in a survey containing placebo items. Intervention providers received a summary of parents’ 15-item PACV responses and interpretation of their PACV score; discretion was given to providers regarding how they acted on this information. VHPs at control clinics completed only the placebo survey items, and their child’s provider received a summary of their responses; control providers remained blinded to parent VHP status. Our outcome was child immunization status at 8 months of age expressed as percent of days underimmunized. We compared outcomes in control and intervention participants using t test and linear mixed-effects regression. RESULTS: We enrolled 24 clinics (12 in each arm) and 156 parents (65 in the intervention arm). Parent characteristics were similar across arms except more intervention (versus control) parents had a first-born child (60.9% vs 44%; P = .04). No significant difference in outcome was detected between arms (25.2% [95% confidence interval: 16.0% to 34.5%] vs 19.1% [95% confidence interval: 12.0% to 26.3%] mean days underimmunized in the intervention and control arms, respectively). CONCLUSION: Vaccine hesitancy screening was not significantly associated with days underimmunized.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference52 articles.

1. Parents with doubts about vaccines: which vaccines and reasons why;Gust;Pediatrics,2008

2. The architecture of provider-parent vaccine discussions at health supervision visits;Opel;Pediatrics,2013

3. Childhood immunization refusal: provider and parent perceptions;Fredrickson;Fam Med,2004

4. Parents’ perspectives on the MMR immunisation: a focus group study;Evans;Br J Gen Pract,2001

5. Confidence about vaccines in the United States: understanding parents’ perceptions;Kennedy;Health Aff (Millwood),2011

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