Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3815831 Patient Education and Counseling 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveAssess health care providers’ attitudes and practices regarding adolescent immunizations, including factors that either impede or facilitate vaccination.MethodsFocus groups—In 2005, 3 focus groups were conducted in Monroe County, NY for (1) urban primary care physicians (PCPs); (2) suburban PCPs; and (3) nurses from practices represented in PCP groups. Audiotaped discussions were transcribed and analyzed using Atlas.ti. Key informant interviews—We recruited knowledgeable informants (18 physicians, 6 nurses) from across the US. The authors conducted in-depth telephone interviews with the participants, typed their interview notes, and sent them to the participant for verification. Separately for nurses, urban physicians, and suburban physicians results for each question were listed and reviewed by the authors. Themes were added to those from the focus groups.ResultsThree overarching themes were identified: professional buy-in (e.g., reimbursement, professional organization recommendations, disease and vaccine characteristics, office consensus); parent/adolescent buy-in (e.g., school requirements, perception of MD recommendations, cost and insurance coverage, media reports, disease and vaccine characteristics, “vaccine fatigue”), and delivery factors (e.g., vaccine supply, ordering, timing and scheduling, consent).ConclusionsProviders identified intertwined system issues that color their attitudes about adolescent immunization.Practice implicationsBuy-in and delivery factors must be addressed before high immunization rates will be achieved.

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