Abstract

During the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, UK uptake of the pandemic influenza vaccine was very low. Furthermore, attitudes governing UK vaccination uptake during a pandemic are poorly characterised. To the best of our knowledge, there is no published research explicitly considering predictors of both adult self-vaccination and decisions regarding whether or not to vaccinate one’s children among the UK population during the H1N1 pandemic. We therefore aimed to identify predictors of both self-vaccination decisions and parental vaccination decisions using data collected during the H1N1 pandemic as part of the Flu Watch cohort study.Data were analysed separately for 798 adults and 85 children: exploratory factor analysis facilitated reduction of 16 items on attitudes to pandemic vaccine into a smaller number of factors. Single variable analyses with vaccine uptake as the outcome were used to identify variables that were predictive of vaccination in children and adults. Potential predictors were: attitudinal factors created by data reduction, age group, sex, region, deprivation, ethnicity, chronic condition, vocation, healthcare-related occupation and previous influenza vaccination.Consistent with previous literature concerning adult self-vaccination decisions, we found that vaccine efficacy/safety and perceived risk of pandemic influenza were significant predictors of both self-vaccination decisions and parental vaccination decisions. This study provides the first systematic attempt to understand both the predictors of self and parental vaccination uptake among the UK general population during the H1N1 pandemic. Our findings indicate that concerns about vaccine safety, and vaccine effectiveness may be a barrier to increased uptake for both self and parental vaccination.

Highlights

  • The H1N1 (‘Swine Flu’) pandemic represented a significant worldwide public health emergency

  • Items relating to attitudes likely to be negatively associated with pandemic influenza vaccination (e.g., ‘‘I did not think that I was eligible for pandemic vaccine”) were reverse coded prior to data reduction for ease of interpretation

  • An eight-item factor broadly related to vaccine safety, testing and side-effects, and concerns regarding the impact of influenza on

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Summary

Introduction

The H1N1 (‘Swine Flu’) pandemic represented a significant worldwide public health emergency. We are aware of two qualitative studies [21,22] Of these nine quantitative papers, six concerned the behaviour of the general public [7,23,15,27,35,39]. At the time of surveying the Flu Watch ‘pandemic cohort’, those eligible for vaccination included social/healthcare workers, pregnant women, household contacts of immunocompromised people, seasonal influenza clinical at-risk groups, and healthy children aged 6 months to 5 years [17,33]. We use the Flu Watch pandemic cohort data to provide an initial examination of the potential predictors of both adult self- and parental vaccination decisions during the H1N1 pandemic. We were interested in addressing: (1) what were the significant predictors of H1N1 vaccine uptake among the 2009 Flu Watch pandemic cohort? (2) do these predictors differ depending on whether they concern self or parental vaccination decisions?

Participants & design
Predictors of pandemic influenza vaccination
Discussion
Conclusions
Limitations
Acknowledgements and funding
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