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Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy

Ongoing outbreaks of measles threaten its elimination status in the United States. Its resurgence points to lower parental vaccine confidence and local pockets of unvaccinated and undervaccinated individuals. The geographic clustering of hesitancy to MMR indicates the presence of social drivers that...

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Autores principales: Novilla, M. Lelinneth B., Goates, Michael C., Redelfs, Alisha H., Quenzer, Mallory, Novilla, Lynneth Kirsten B., Leffler, Tyler, Holt, Christian A., Doria, Russell B., Dang, Michael T., Hewitt, Melissa, Lind, Emma, Prickett, Elizabeth, Aldridge, Katelyn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10224336/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37243030
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11050926
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author Novilla, M. Lelinneth B.
Goates, Michael C.
Redelfs, Alisha H.
Quenzer, Mallory
Novilla, Lynneth Kirsten B.
Leffler, Tyler
Holt, Christian A.
Doria, Russell B.
Dang, Michael T.
Hewitt, Melissa
Lind, Emma
Prickett, Elizabeth
Aldridge, Katelyn
author_facet Novilla, M. Lelinneth B.
Goates, Michael C.
Redelfs, Alisha H.
Quenzer, Mallory
Novilla, Lynneth Kirsten B.
Leffler, Tyler
Holt, Christian A.
Doria, Russell B.
Dang, Michael T.
Hewitt, Melissa
Lind, Emma
Prickett, Elizabeth
Aldridge, Katelyn
author_sort Novilla, M. Lelinneth B.
collection PubMed
description Ongoing outbreaks of measles threaten its elimination status in the United States. Its resurgence points to lower parental vaccine confidence and local pockets of unvaccinated and undervaccinated individuals. The geographic clustering of hesitancy to MMR indicates the presence of social drivers that shape parental perceptions and decisions on immunization. Through a qualitative systematic review of published literature (n = 115 articles; 7 databases), we determined major themes regarding parental reasons for MMR vaccine hesitancy, social context of MMR vaccine hesitancy, and trustworthy vaccine information sources. Fear of autism was the most cited reason for MMR hesitancy. The social drivers of vaccine hesitancy included primary care/healthcare, education, economy, and government/policy factors. Social factors, such as income and education, exerted a bidirectional influence, which facilitated or hindered vaccine compliance depending on how the social determinant was experienced. Fear of autism was the most cited reason for MMR hesitancy. Vaccine hesitancy to MMR and other childhood vaccines clustered in middle- to high-income areas among mothers with a college-level education or higher who preferred internet/social media narratives over physician-based vaccine information. They had low parental trust, low perceived disease susceptibility, and were skeptical of vaccine safety and benefits. Combating MMR vaccine misinformation and hesitancy requires intersectoral and multifaceted approaches at various socioecological levels to address the social drivers of vaccine behavior.
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spelling pubmed-102243362023-05-28 Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy Novilla, M. Lelinneth B. Goates, Michael C. Redelfs, Alisha H. Quenzer, Mallory Novilla, Lynneth Kirsten B. Leffler, Tyler Holt, Christian A. Doria, Russell B. Dang, Michael T. Hewitt, Melissa Lind, Emma Prickett, Elizabeth Aldridge, Katelyn Vaccines (Basel) Systematic Review Ongoing outbreaks of measles threaten its elimination status in the United States. Its resurgence points to lower parental vaccine confidence and local pockets of unvaccinated and undervaccinated individuals. The geographic clustering of hesitancy to MMR indicates the presence of social drivers that shape parental perceptions and decisions on immunization. Through a qualitative systematic review of published literature (n = 115 articles; 7 databases), we determined major themes regarding parental reasons for MMR vaccine hesitancy, social context of MMR vaccine hesitancy, and trustworthy vaccine information sources. Fear of autism was the most cited reason for MMR hesitancy. The social drivers of vaccine hesitancy included primary care/healthcare, education, economy, and government/policy factors. Social factors, such as income and education, exerted a bidirectional influence, which facilitated or hindered vaccine compliance depending on how the social determinant was experienced. Fear of autism was the most cited reason for MMR hesitancy. Vaccine hesitancy to MMR and other childhood vaccines clustered in middle- to high-income areas among mothers with a college-level education or higher who preferred internet/social media narratives over physician-based vaccine information. They had low parental trust, low perceived disease susceptibility, and were skeptical of vaccine safety and benefits. Combating MMR vaccine misinformation and hesitancy requires intersectoral and multifaceted approaches at various socioecological levels to address the social drivers of vaccine behavior. MDPI 2023-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10224336/ /pubmed/37243030 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11050926 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Systematic Review
Novilla, M. Lelinneth B.
Goates, Michael C.
Redelfs, Alisha H.
Quenzer, Mallory
Novilla, Lynneth Kirsten B.
Leffler, Tyler
Holt, Christian A.
Doria, Russell B.
Dang, Michael T.
Hewitt, Melissa
Lind, Emma
Prickett, Elizabeth
Aldridge, Katelyn
Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy
title Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy
title_full Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy
title_fullStr Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy
title_full_unstemmed Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy
title_short Why Parents Say No to Having Their Children Vaccinated against Measles: A Systematic Review of the Social Determinants of Parental Perceptions on MMR Vaccine Hesitancy
title_sort why parents say no to having their children vaccinated against measles: a systematic review of the social determinants of parental perceptions on mmr vaccine hesitancy
topic Systematic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10224336/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37243030
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11050926
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