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About:
Ad Hoc Influenza Vaccination During Years of Significant Antigenic Drift in a Tropical City With 2 Seasonal Peaks: A Cross-Sectional Survey Among Health Care Practitioners
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schema:ScholarlyArticle
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wasabi.inria.fr
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Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
has title
Ad Hoc Influenza Vaccination During Years of Significant Antigenic Drift in a Tropical City With 2 Seasonal Peaks: A Cross-Sectional Survey Among Health Care Practitioners
Creator
Lee, Nelson
Lam, Bosco
Leung, Czarina
Wong, Martin
Anthony, E
Chan, Martin
Chan, Paul
Cheng, Frankie
Cheung, Hong
Choi, Kin
Lai, Christopher
Leung, Ting
Nelson, S
Rainer, Timothy
Wong, Samuel
Source
PMC
abstract
We evaluated the acceptability of an additional ad hoc influenza vaccination among the health care professionals following seasons with significant antigenic drift. Self-administered, anonymous surveys were performed by hard copy questionnaires in public hospitals, and by an on-line platform available to all healthcare professionals, from April 1st to May 31st, 2015. A total of 1290 healthcare professionals completed the questionnaires, including doctors, nurses, and allied health professionals working in both the public and private systems. Only 31.8% of participating respondents expressed an intention to receive the additional vaccine, despite that the majority of them agreed or strongly agreed that it would bring benefit to the community (88.9%), save lives (86.7%), reduce medical expenses (76.3%), satisfy public expectation (82.8%), and increase awareness of vaccination (86.1%). However, a significant proportion expressed concern that the vaccine could disturb the normal immunization schedule (45.5%); felt uncertain what to do in the next vaccination round (66.0%); perceived that the summer peak might not occur (48.2%); and believed that the summer peak might not be of the same virus (83.5%). Furthermore, 27.8% of all respondents expected that the additional vaccination could weaken the efficacy of previous vaccinations; 51.3% was concerned about side effects; and 61.3% estimated that there would be a low uptake rate. If the supply of vaccine was limited, higher priority groups were considered to include the elderly aged ≥65 years with chronic medical conditions (89.2%), the elderly living in residential care homes (87.4%), and long-stay residents of institutions for the disabled (80.7%). The strongest factors associated with accepting the additional vaccine included immunization with influenza vaccines in the past 3 years, higher perceived risk of contracting influenza, and higher perceived severity of the disease impact. The acceptability to an additional ad hoc influenza vaccination was low among healthcare professionals. This could have a negative impact on such additional vaccination campaigns since healthcare professionals are a key driver for vaccine acceptance. The discordance in perceived risk and acceptance of vaccination regarding self versus public deserves further evaluation.
has issue date
2016-05-13
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1097/md.0000000000003359
bibo:pmid
27175633
has license
cc-by-nd
sha1sum (hex)
f9476a333c17961ff4cc34b45f4b2da5ed29457f
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1097/md.0000000000003359
resource representing a document's title
Ad Hoc Influenza Vaccination During Years of Significant Antigenic Drift in a Tropical City With 2 Seasonal Peaks: A Cross-Sectional Survey Among Health Care Practitioners
has PubMed Central identifier
PMC4902475
has PubMed identifier
27175633
schema:publication
Medicine (Baltimore)
resource representing a document's body
covid:f9476a333c17961ff4cc34b45f4b2da5ed29457f#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'HEALTH CARE'
named entity 'CITY'
named entity 'ANTIGENIC DRIFT'
named entity 'EVALUATED'
named entity 'SIGNIFICANT'
named entity 'PEAKS'
named entity 'ANTIGENIC DRIFT'
named entity 'CROSS-SECTIONAL SURVEY'
named entity 'SIGNIFICANT'
named entity 'HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS'
named entity 'PRACTITIONERS'
named entity 'YEARS'
named entity 'TROPICAL'
named entity 'INFLUENZA VACCINATION'
named entity 'ACCEPTABILITY'
named entity 'SEASONAL'
named entity 'SEASONS'
named entity 'FOLLOWING'
named entity 'INFLUENZA VACCINATION'
named entity 'ADDITIONAL'
covid:arg/f9476a333c17961ff4cc34b45f4b2da5ed29457f
named entity 'additional'
named entity 'Health Care'
named entity 'ad hoc'
named entity 'Influenza Vaccination'
named entity 'Antigenic Drift'
named entity 'Cross-Sectional Survey'
named entity 'contracting influenza'
named entity 'healthcare workers'
named entity 'flu'
named entity 'influenza'
named entity 'vaccination'
named entity 'healthcare professionals'
named entity 'influenza'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'vaccination'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'pregnant women'
named entity 'intensive care'
named entity 'vaccination'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'influenza'
named entity 'H1N1'
named entity 'influenza'
named entity 'influenza vaccination'
named entity 'highly contagious'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'HBM'
named entity 'family physicians'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'health services'
named entity 'Hong Kong'
named entity 'pediatricians'
named entity 'residential care homes'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'respiratory disease'
named entity 'vaccination schedule'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System'
named entity 'Southern Hemisphere'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'high-risk'
named entity 'microbiologists'
named entity 'H3N2'
named entity 'healthcare workers'
named entity 'vaccine'
named entity 'vaccine'
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