학술논문

Perspectives on Maternal Vaccination from Obstetrical Clinicians: A Qualitative Multi-site Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Maternal & Child Health Journal. Dec2022, Vol. 26 Issue 12, p2506-2516. 11p. 2 Charts.
Subject
*INFLUENZA prevention
*MATERNAL health services
*VACCINATION
*INFLUENZA vaccines
*MIDWIVES
*RESEARCH
*HEALTH policy
*NURSES' attitudes
*IMMUNIZATION
*DPT vaccines
*HEALTH care reminder systems
*ATTITUDE (Psychology)
*ATTITUDES of medical personnel
*RESEARCH methodology
*NURSING specialties
*VACCINE refusal
*TIME
*PHYSICIANS' attitudes
*INTERVIEWING
*MEDICAL office nursing
*WHOOPING cough
*QUALITATIVE research
*PATIENTS' attitudes
*SOUND recordings
*QUALITY assurance
*VACCINE hesitancy
*COMMUNICATION
*HOSPITAL nursing staff
*PSYCHOSOCIAL factors
*RESEARCH funding
*WHOOPING cough vaccines
*PHYSICIANS
*PATIENT education
*PATIENT-professional relations
*COVID-19 pandemic
*PREGNANCY
Language
ISSN
1092-7875
Abstract
Objectives: Despite the seriousness of influenza and pertussis, availability of safe and effective vaccines against them, and long-standing maternal vaccination recommendations, US maternal influenza and Tdap vaccination rates have been low. To increase vaccination rates in obstetric offices, it is important to understand clinician perspectives and office processes. We conducted in-depth interviews with nurses and providers on these topics. Methods: Interviewees worked in obstetric offices in one-of-four participating health systems in NY and CA. We audio-recorded and transcribed 20–30-min interviews. We used predetermined categories to code interviews with Dedoose, then iteratively refined codes and identified themes. Results: We conducted 20 interviews between 4/2020 and 9/2020: 13 providers (physician or nurse midwife) (5 NY, 8 CA); 7 office nurses (6 NY, 1 CA). In almost all offices, patient refusal of influenza vaccine was considered the major vaccination barrier; Tdap was often deferred by patients until post-delivery. Nurse-only visits for either vaccine were rare. Vaccination outside the office was uncommon; few offices systematically documented vaccines given elsewhere in a retrievable manner. Participants emphasized patient education as key to prenatal care, but the number of topics left little time for immunizations. Few interviewees could identify an office "immunization champion," knew their office vaccination rates, or had participated in vaccination quality improvement. Several interviewees indicated that they or another provider were good at persuading hesitant patients, but their method had not been shared with other clinicians. Conclusions for Practice: Multiple practical barriers and maternal vaccine hesitancy limit maternal vaccination. Quality improvement strategies are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]