Influenza vaccine is recommended as routine care for all individuals who are at least 6 months of age and older. Recently, questions about vaccine safety and concerns for side effects have increased, contributing to both influenza vaccine hesitancy and refusal. In an effort to educate parents and patients, public health entities and physicians give informational handouts in various forms. However, recent publications have found that pro-vaccine messages can have paradoxical effects on vaccine intentions, therefore further studies on vaccine related public health communication is needed. Few, if any, studies have analyzed the relationship between influenza vaccine attitudes and intention with actual vaccine receipt in the pediatric population. These results will help to understand the relationship between parent's vaccine perception and the intent to vaccinate versus the child's receipt of the influenza vaccine, as well as to optimize educational information given to families regarding the influenza vaccine.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
400
Participants in this arm receive educational information regarding influenza vaccination based on local educational information.
Participants in this arm receive educational information regarding influenza vaccination based on national educational information.
Columbia University Medical Center
New York, New York, United States
Number of children who receive influenza vaccination on day of intervention
Receipt of influenza vaccination by the child on the day of the educational intervention
Time frame: Day 0
Number of children who receive influenza vaccination during the influenza vaccine season
Receipt of influenza vaccination by the child by April 2017
Time frame: Up to 7 months
Number of parents who anticipate influenza vaccination during the influenza vaccine season
Parents report planned receipt of influenza vaccination by themselves by April 2017
Time frame: Up to 7 months
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