Peer education as a strategy to promote vaccine acceptance: A randomized controlled trial within New York community healthcare practices

Effective strategies are needed to improve vaccine acceptance. This study sought to determine if a peer-led vaccine education intervention embedded within community medical practices increases parental acceptance of pediatric pneumococcal conjugate vaccination. From March 2022-July 2023, we conducte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vaccine 2024-11, Vol.42, p.126028, Article 126028
Hauptverfasser: Hoffman, Emily, Kahan, Tamara, Auerbach, Esther, Brody, Heidi, Abramson, Natalie Nesha, Haiken, Sarah, Shields, Danielle, Elyasi, Ailin, Ifrah, Sheindel, Frenkel-Schick, Alysa, Zyskind, Israel, Knoll, Miriam, Carmody, Ellie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Effective strategies are needed to improve vaccine acceptance. This study sought to determine if a peer-led vaccine education intervention embedded within community medical practices increases parental acceptance of pediatric pneumococcal conjugate vaccination. From March 2022-July 2023, we conducted a randomized trial at three pediatric health practices in predominantly Hasidic Jewish neighborhoods in New York, where vaccine deferral is common. Parents of children up to 18 months due/overdue for routine pneumococcal vaccination were randomized (1:1) to receive routine care alone or routine care plus a peer educational intervention. Peer educators trained in motivational interviewing and vaccine science provided counseling at enrollment and follow-up telephone engagement in the intervention arm at day 30 and 60. Primary outcome was child’s pneumococcal immunization status by allocation arm expressed as at least one dose received between enrollment and 90 days post-enrollment. 144 parent–child dyads were eligible for outcome analysis. Participants in the group receiving routine care along with peer-led vaccine counseling were significantly more likely to have their child receive at least 1 vaccine dose between enrollment and 90 days compared to the group who received routine care alone (28.4 % vs 12.9 %, risk ratio [RR] 2.21, confidence interval [CI] 1.09–4.49, p = 0.022). The effect of peer education was greatest in dyads with children less than 1 year old at enrollment (34 % vs 12.7 %, RR 2.67, CI (1.22–5.86), p = 0.009). Peer vaccine education can increase vaccine acceptance compared to routine care alone and may be particularly valuable in decreasing vaccination delays for younger infants. (Funded by EGL Charitable Foundation, ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05875779).
ISSN:0264-410X
1873-2518
1873-2518
DOI:10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.05.076