The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Parents’ Perceptions and Acceptance of Routine Childhood Vaccination: A National Longitudinal Study

27 Pages Posted: 26 Jul 2022

See all articles by Robin Marie Humble

Robin Marie Humble

University of Alberta - Faculty of Nursing

Shannon D. Scott

University of Alberta

Ève Dubé

Institut National De Santé Publique Du Québec

Joanne Olson

University of Alberta

Shannon E. MacDonald

University of Alberta

Abstract

Background: A decline in routine vaccination was reported by many countries early in the COVID-19 pandemic. Within the context of the pandemic, determinants of routine childhood vaccination may have changed. Changes over time in parents’ perceptions of routine vaccines and intentions for their children during the pandemic have not been fully explored. Understanding changes provides opportunities to promote routine vaccines and address factors that may compromise parents’ acceptance.

Methods: We conducted two cross-sectional national surveys during the pandemic (Dec 2020 and Oct/Nov 2021) to assess changes over time in Canadian parents’ perceptions of routine childhood vaccines, intentions to vaccinate, and access for their child(ren) ≤17 years. Differences among sociodemographic characteristics were also assessed. McNemar-Bowker tests were used to determine changes in parents’ responses collected at two time points.

Results: Twenty-five percent of parents with a child ≤6 years and 20.5% with a child 7-17 years perceived that routine childhood vaccines were more important because of the pandemic. Between the two time points, parents’ confidence in the safety (72.8% to 80.2%, p<.001) and effectiveness (81.7% to 85.2%, p=.007) of routine vaccines increased, parents were more engaged in vaccine decision-making (73.4% to 79.8%, p=.006), and everyday stress preventing vaccination decreased (78.8% to 68.5%, p<.001). Acceptance of routine vaccines increased (82.9% to 86.5%, p=.021), but more parents were undecided about influenza vaccination (12.6% to 20.3%, p=.002). Compared to parents with 1 child, those with 2 children reported an increase in routine vaccination acceptance (82.6% to 87.4%, p=.024).

Interpretation: Under the spotlight of COVID-19, parents’ confidence in routine vaccines, engagement in decision-making, and vaccine acceptance for their children increased. Vaccination providers should support parents’ decision-making as they navigate routine childhood vaccine uncertainties. Differences in parents’ acceptance of routine and influenza vaccines for their children highlight the need for targeted communication strategies for specific vaccines.

Note:

Funding Information: This work was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

Declaration of Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval Statement: This study received approval from the Health Research Ethics Board at the University of Alberta.

Keywords: vaccine, Immunization, child, parents, Covid-19, pandemic

Suggested Citation

Humble, Robin Marie and Scott, Shannon D. and Dubé, Ève and Olson, Joanne and MacDonald, Shannon E., The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Parents’ Perceptions and Acceptance of Routine Childhood Vaccination: A National Longitudinal Study. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4172979 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4172979

Robin Marie Humble (Contact Author)

University of Alberta - Faculty of Nursing ( email )

Shannon D. Scott

University of Alberta ( email )

Edmonton, T6G 2R3
Canada

Ève Dubé

Institut National De Santé Publique Du Québec ( email )

Montreal, Quebec
Canada

Joanne Olson

University of Alberta ( email )

Edmonton, T6G 2R3
Canada

Shannon E. MacDonald

University of Alberta ( email )

Edmonton, T6G 2R3
Canada

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
44
Abstract Views
215
PlumX Metrics