Barriers to vaccination among Japanese medical students: Focus group interviews

Background: To date, medical schools and clinical training hospitals in Japan that require students to show immunity for measles, mumps, rubella, varicella (chickenpox), and hepatitis B prior to the commencement of residency are limited. Methods: This qualitative study used focus group interviews to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatrics international 2008-06, Vol.50 (3), p.300-305
Hauptverfasser: Okamoto, Shigeru, Slingsby, Brian Taylor, Nakayama, Takeo, Nakamura, Kanae, Fukuda, Risa, Gomi-Yano, Harumi, Ohno, Hiroshi, Matsumura, Tadashi
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container_end_page 305
container_issue 3
container_start_page 300
container_title Pediatrics international
container_volume 50
creator Okamoto, Shigeru
Slingsby, Brian Taylor
Nakayama, Takeo
Nakamura, Kanae
Fukuda, Risa
Gomi-Yano, Harumi
Ohno, Hiroshi
Matsumura, Tadashi
description Background: To date, medical schools and clinical training hospitals in Japan that require students to show immunity for measles, mumps, rubella, varicella (chickenpox), and hepatitis B prior to the commencement of residency are limited. Methods: This qualitative study used focus group interviews to elucidate why medical students do not undergo vaccination. A total of three groups were identified and interviewed: group A (two men, three women), group B (two men, two women), group C (three men, two women). All recorded interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed according to the constant comparative method with a series of codes and categories. Results: Findings elucidated that vaccination for medical students is not mandatory in Japan. Analysis found that the factors that influence willingness to be vaccinated can be divided into three dimensions (individual level, university/regional hospital level, governmental level) and two primary categories (cost of vaccination, awareness of vaccination) consisting of 10 codes. These factors did not exist in isolation, but have mutually overlapping areas. Conclusions: Vaccination against vaccine‐preventable diseases is essential to a hospital’s infectious‐disease countermeasures and cannot continue to be overlooked by physicians (at the individual level), by universities and residency programs (at the community level) nor by the government (at the national level).
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1442-200X.2008.02576.x
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Adult
Attitude of Health Personnel
Attitude to Health
Awareness
Cross Infection - prevention & control
Female
Focus groups
Health behavior
Health services utilization
Humans
Infectious diseases
Interviews as Topic - methods
Japan
Male
Medical residencies
Medical schools
Patient Compliance - psychology
Patient Compliance - statistics & numerical data
professionalism
qualitative study
resident
Retrospective Studies
Students, Medical - statistics & numerical data
Teaching hospitals
vaccination
Vaccination - economics
Vaccination - psychology
Vaccination - statistics & numerical data
Vaccines
Vaccines - therapeutic use
title Barriers to vaccination among Japanese medical students: Focus group interviews
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