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1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations

BACKGROUND: Minority adult populations are at a higher risk for invasive pneumococcal disease and also have significantly lower vaccination rates when compared with the general population. Ingrained attitudes are a significant barrier to receipt of pneumococcal vaccine in these disparate populations...

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Autores principales: Tolg, Maria-Stephanie, Hutchison, Marc, Krueger, Brian, Orr, Katherine, DeAngelis, Jennifer, Caffrey, Aisling, LaPlante, Kerry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6254755/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1268
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author Tolg, Maria-Stephanie
Hutchison, Marc
Krueger, Brian
Orr, Katherine
DeAngelis, Jennifer
Caffrey, Aisling
LaPlante, Kerry
author_facet Tolg, Maria-Stephanie
Hutchison, Marc
Krueger, Brian
Orr, Katherine
DeAngelis, Jennifer
Caffrey, Aisling
LaPlante, Kerry
author_sort Tolg, Maria-Stephanie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Minority adult populations are at a higher risk for invasive pneumococcal disease and also have significantly lower vaccination rates when compared with the general population. Ingrained attitudes are a significant barrier to receipt of pneumococcal vaccine in these disparate populations, and therefore we tested targeted informational messaging to overcome these. METHODS: A survey instrument of attitudinal questions related to pneumococcal vaccination was administered via YouGov, an online public national survey house in 2017. Socioeconomic information was captured and linked to baseline Likert scale attitudinal question responses. Respondents were randomly assigned into subsamples that received different science-based messages that included information on pneumococcal vaccines related to: pneumonia prevention, fatality/consequences, vaccine safety information, family duty/safety, and a combined vignette including all of these. Because of the random assignment, any differences observed in the respondents’ outcomes across subsamples can be attributed to the messages. Descriptive statistics were used to compare the persuasive effectiveness of these messages to conventional vaccine information across racial and ethnic groups. RESULTS: A total of 2,608 respondents, 1,327 (51%) white and 1,281 (49%) non-white (over-sampled) were represented. Of the total respondents as well as in white, and non-white respondents, the combined vignette was associated with positive coefficients of b = 0.26, b = 0.24, and b = 0.32, respectively (P-values all <0.05). In whites, the vaccine safety information and family duty/safety also had significant coefficients b = 0.24 ( = P = 0.012) and b = 0.24 (P = 0016), respectively. In non-Whites, family duty/safety was the only additional message with a significant coefficient b = 0.25 (P = 0.007). CONCLUSION: In this survey assessing attitudes toward pneumococcal vaccination across racial and ethnic subpopulations, the disparate population was persuaded to receive the vaccine only when family duty and safety were linked within the informational messages. Future studies implementing this informational messaging strategy should be performed to validate this finding. DISCLOSURES: A. Caffrey, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals: Grant Investigator, Research grant; Merck: Grant Investigator, Research grant; The Medicines Company: Grant Investigator, Research grant. K. LaPlante, Merck: Grant Investigator, Research grant; Pfizer Pharmaceuticals: Grant Investigator, Research grant; Allergan: Scientific Advisor, Honorarium; Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc: Grant Investigator and Scientific Advisor, Honorarium and Research grant; Achaogen, Inc.: Scientific Advisor, Honorarium; Zavante Therapeutics, Inc.: Scientific Advisor, Honorarium.
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spelling pubmed-62547552018-11-28 1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations Tolg, Maria-Stephanie Hutchison, Marc Krueger, Brian Orr, Katherine DeAngelis, Jennifer Caffrey, Aisling LaPlante, Kerry Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Minority adult populations are at a higher risk for invasive pneumococcal disease and also have significantly lower vaccination rates when compared with the general population. Ingrained attitudes are a significant barrier to receipt of pneumococcal vaccine in these disparate populations, and therefore we tested targeted informational messaging to overcome these. METHODS: A survey instrument of attitudinal questions related to pneumococcal vaccination was administered via YouGov, an online public national survey house in 2017. Socioeconomic information was captured and linked to baseline Likert scale attitudinal question responses. Respondents were randomly assigned into subsamples that received different science-based messages that included information on pneumococcal vaccines related to: pneumonia prevention, fatality/consequences, vaccine safety information, family duty/safety, and a combined vignette including all of these. Because of the random assignment, any differences observed in the respondents’ outcomes across subsamples can be attributed to the messages. Descriptive statistics were used to compare the persuasive effectiveness of these messages to conventional vaccine information across racial and ethnic groups. RESULTS: A total of 2,608 respondents, 1,327 (51%) white and 1,281 (49%) non-white (over-sampled) were represented. Of the total respondents as well as in white, and non-white respondents, the combined vignette was associated with positive coefficients of b = 0.26, b = 0.24, and b = 0.32, respectively (P-values all <0.05). In whites, the vaccine safety information and family duty/safety also had significant coefficients b = 0.24 ( = P = 0.012) and b = 0.24 (P = 0016), respectively. In non-Whites, family duty/safety was the only additional message with a significant coefficient b = 0.25 (P = 0.007). CONCLUSION: In this survey assessing attitudes toward pneumococcal vaccination across racial and ethnic subpopulations, the disparate population was persuaded to receive the vaccine only when family duty and safety were linked within the informational messages. Future studies implementing this informational messaging strategy should be performed to validate this finding. DISCLOSURES: A. Caffrey, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals: Grant Investigator, Research grant; Merck: Grant Investigator, Research grant; The Medicines Company: Grant Investigator, Research grant. K. LaPlante, Merck: Grant Investigator, Research grant; Pfizer Pharmaceuticals: Grant Investigator, Research grant; Allergan: Scientific Advisor, Honorarium; Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc: Grant Investigator and Scientific Advisor, Honorarium and Research grant; Achaogen, Inc.: Scientific Advisor, Honorarium; Zavante Therapeutics, Inc.: Scientific Advisor, Honorarium. Oxford University Press 2018-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6254755/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1268 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Tolg, Maria-Stephanie
Hutchison, Marc
Krueger, Brian
Orr, Katherine
DeAngelis, Jennifer
Caffrey, Aisling
LaPlante, Kerry
1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations
title 1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations
title_full 1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations
title_fullStr 1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations
title_full_unstemmed 1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations
title_short 1437. Family Duty and Safety Linked to Overcoming Attitudinal Barriers to Adult Pneumococcal Vaccination in Disparate Populations
title_sort 1437. family duty and safety linked to overcoming attitudinal barriers to adult pneumococcal vaccination in disparate populations
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6254755/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1268
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