Abstract

In 2019, the World Health Organization (WHO) listed vaccine hesitancy in its top ten threats to global health. Vaccine hesitancy is a “delay in acceptance or refusal to vaccinate despite availability of vaccination services”. Urban areas with large amounts of vaccine hesitancy are at risk for the resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs). Many vaccine-hesitant (VH) parents may be unfamiliar with the consequences of VPDs, and thus might be swayed when confronted with the symptoms and dangers of VPDs. As such, we sought to educate college students (future parents) in an urban vaccine-hesitant hotspot by assigning them to interview family or community members who had experienced a VPD. Student vaccine attitudes were assessed by surveys before and after the interviews. Vaccine-hesitant students who conducted a VPD interview but received no additional vaccine educational materials were significantly more likely (interaction term p < 0.001) to become pro-vaccine (PV) (68%) than students who conducted an autoimmune interview and received no additional educational materials. Additionally, students whose interviewees experienced intense physical suffering or physical limitations or students who were enrolled in a course with intensive VPD and vaccine curriculum had significantly increased vaccine attitudes. This suggests that introducing students to VPDs can decrease vaccine hesitancy.

Highlights

  • Vaccines are victims of their own success

  • This has led to a rise in vaccine hesitancy by parents that results in a “delay in acceptance or refusal to vaccinate despite availability of vaccination services” [6]

  • The subject matter used while teaching about vaccine-preventable diseases matters

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Summary

Introduction

Vaccines are victims of their own success. Due to the effectiveness of vaccination programs, many people have limited or no experience with vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs) [1]. Parents increasingly assume that the risks associated with VPDs are minimal compared to potential health and safety risks of vaccinations themselves [2,3,4,5]. In the 2016–2017 school year, Utah County (Provo) in Utah, USA ranked sixth nationally for the total number of entering kindergartners that were under-vaccinated as measured by non-medical exemption (NME) waivers (n = 662 NME) [7]. As many of these parents may have never experienced VPDs, we hypothesized that designing an intervention

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