Abstract

BackgroundAlthough pneumococcal vaccine is recommended for everyone 65 years of age and older, only 58% of Canadians in this age group have been vaccinated, well below the Public Health Agency of Canada’s target of 80%. To improve uptake, a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial testing the effectiveness of a community pharmacist intervention was developed. ObjectiveThis prespecified sub-study aimed to uncover and quantify factors contributing to vaccine hesitancy by exploring the nature of patient-pharmacist conversations about pneumococcal vaccine. MethodsBeginning each month (April– August 2023), participating pharmacies were randomly selected to receive an education package designed to enhance pharmacists’ knowledge, skills, and abilities in promoting pneumococcal vaccination. Pharmacists provided usual care (control stage) until they received the educational package and transitioned to the intervention stage. Weekly scorecards tracked patient-pharmacist conversations about pneumococcal vaccination. Chi-squared tests compared time taken for each conversation and patient-reported reason(s) for refusal between control and intervention stages. ResultsThirteen pharmacies from across Alberta were included in the analysis, reporting 656 patient-pharmacist conversations (control stage n = 271, intervention stage n = 385). Time taken for pneumococcal vaccine conversations decreased after pharmacies received the education package (65% of conversations resulting in vaccination took <20 minutes in the control stage, compared to 88% in the intervention stage (P = 0.004)). The most common patient-reported reason for refusal, needing more time to think about the vaccine, remained similar between stages (P = 0.23). However, during the intervention stage, fewer patients refused vaccination due to lack of time to receive it today (P = 0.016) and perceived lack of benefit (P = 0.035), but more patients refused vaccination due to cost barriers (P = 0.026). ConclusionThe education provided in this study changed the reasons for refusing vaccines, suggesting the nature of patient-pharmacist conversations became more efficient and informed. Similar interventions could be adopted across Canada and the United States to help combat vaccine hesitancy.

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