Trust matters: The Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy in Europe Study
Author
Vuolanto, Pia
Almeida, Ana Nunes
Anderson, Alistair
Auvinen, Petra
Beja, Andre
Bracke, Piet
Cardano, Mario
Ceuterick, Melissa
Correia, Tiago
De Vito, Elisabetta
Delaruelle, Katrijn
Delicado, Ana
Esposito, Maurizio
Ferrara, Maria
Gariglio, Luigi
Guerreiro, Catia
Hilario, Ana Patricia
Hobson-west, Pru
Iorio, Juliana
Jarvinen, Katri-Maria
Koivu, Annariina
Kuusipalo, Aapo
Lermytte, Esther
Mendonca, Joana
Morais, Rita
Polak, Paulina
Rudek, Tadeusz
Sbaragli, Sara
Scavarda, Alice
Silva, Katielle
Da Silva, Pedro Alcantara
Sivela, Jonas
Swiatkiewicz-Mosny, Maria
Tipaldo, Giuseppe
Wagner, Aleksandra
Publication date
2024Published in
Scandinavian Journal of Public HealthVolume / Issue
52 (3)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 1403-4948ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1651-1905Metadata
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1177/14034948231223791
Abstract
This article presents the design of a seven-country study focusing on childhood vaccines, Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy in Europe (VAX-TRUST), developed during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study consists of (a) situation analysis of vaccine hesitancy (examination of individual, socio-demographic and macro-level factors of vaccine hesitancy and analysis of media coverage on vaccines and vaccination and (b) participant observation and in-depth interviews of healthcare professionals and vaccine-hesitant parents. These analyses were used to design interventions aimed at increasing awareness on the complexity of vaccine hesitancy among healthcare professionals involved in discussing childhood vaccines with parents. We present the selection of countries and regions, the conceptual basis of the study, details of the data collection and the process of designing and evaluating the interventions, as well as the potential impact of the study. Laying out our research design serves as an example of how to translate complex public health issues into social scientific study and methods.
Keywords
Vaccine hesitancy, health sociology, public health, cross-country study, study design,
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2564License
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