Adverse events among early caregivers' COVID-19 vaccination correlated inversely with intention to vaccinate their children.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
40121734
Description
Objectives
Vaccine hesitancy increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. We evaluated if manifestation of adverse events when caregivers received their vaccine was associated with their willingness to vaccinate their children.Methods
A multicenter, cross-sectional, multi-lingual survey of caregivers presenting to 19 pediatric Emergency Departments in the USA, Canada, Israel, and Switzerland early during the early stage of the pandemic, before vaccines for children were available. We asked caregivers if they were vaccinated against COVID-19, to report any side effects and if they would give vaccine to their child. We categorized all reported side effects and report the most common ones. We report willingness to vaccinate based on child's age.Results
Of 4261 caregivers, mean caregiver age was 38.3 years, 2893 (68.3 %) mothers, 3108 (73.3 %) greater than high school education. 43.6 % reported side effects, 35.7 % reported no side effects and 20.7 % were unvaccinated. The lowest rate of caregivers planning to vaccinate their children was the unvaccinated (6.9 %) and the highest was among caregivers who did not report any side effects (74.4 %). Caregivers with no reported side effects after vaccination were more likely to vaccinate their children compared to those that had some side effects (aOR of 1.34, 1.52 and 2.14 for ages <5, 5-11 and ≥12 years, respectively). Reporting general illness/feeling unwell, experiencing weakness, and breathing difficulty were associated with caregivers unlikely to plan to vaccinate their children. The OR to vaccinate children for each additional side effect was 0.86, 95 %CI = 0.78-0.95, p = 0.004, representing a decrease of 14 % in the odds of planning to vaccinate for each additional side effect.Conclusions
Side effects experienced by caregivers are associated with their intention to vaccinate their children. Building of trust in vaccines, including communicating risks and benefits in the context of caregiver's experience, is important and may help enhance rate of vaccination of children.
Vaccine hesitancy increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. We evaluated if manifestation of adverse events when caregivers received their vaccine was associated with their willingness to vaccinate their children.Methods
A multicenter, cross-sectional, multi-lingual survey of caregivers presenting to 19 pediatric Emergency Departments in the USA, Canada, Israel, and Switzerland early during the early stage of the pandemic, before vaccines for children were available. We asked caregivers if they were vaccinated against COVID-19, to report any side effects and if they would give vaccine to their child. We categorized all reported side effects and report the most common ones. We report willingness to vaccinate based on child's age.Results
Of 4261 caregivers, mean caregiver age was 38.3 years, 2893 (68.3 %) mothers, 3108 (73.3 %) greater than high school education. 43.6 % reported side effects, 35.7 % reported no side effects and 20.7 % were unvaccinated. The lowest rate of caregivers planning to vaccinate their children was the unvaccinated (6.9 %) and the highest was among caregivers who did not report any side effects (74.4 %). Caregivers with no reported side effects after vaccination were more likely to vaccinate their children compared to those that had some side effects (aOR of 1.34, 1.52 and 2.14 for ages <5, 5-11 and ≥12 years, respectively). Reporting general illness/feeling unwell, experiencing weakness, and breathing difficulty were associated with caregivers unlikely to plan to vaccinate their children. The OR to vaccinate children for each additional side effect was 0.86, 95 %CI = 0.78-0.95, p = 0.004, representing a decrease of 14 % in the odds of planning to vaccinate for each additional side effect.Conclusions
Side effects experienced by caregivers are associated with their intention to vaccinate their children. Building of trust in vaccines, including communicating risks and benefits in the context of caregiver's experience, is important and may help enhance rate of vaccination of children.
Date of Publication
2025-05-10
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
COVID-19
•
Emergency medicine
•
Sars-cov-2
•
Vaccination
•
Vaccine hesitancy
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Goldman, R D | |
Hart, R J | |
Bone, J N | |
Olson, P G | |
Manzano, S | |
Gualco, G | |
Krupik, D | |
Weigert, R M | |
Chung, S | |
Thompson, G C | |
Shah, P | |
Gaucher, N O | |
Lunoe, M M | |
Evers, M | |
Pharisa Rochat, C | |
Nelson, C E | |
Gal, M | |
Baumer-Mouradian, S H |
Additional Credits
Series
Vaccine
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
1873-2518
0264-410X
Access(Rights)
restricted