News

AAP speaks out on dismissal of vaccine-refusing patients, vaccine hesitancy


 

FROM PEDIATRICS

References

The report also emphasizes the potential effectiveness of personalizing vaccine conversations by having doctors share their own experience, such as the fact that they vaccinated themselves, their children, and/or their grandchildren.

“Parents often are more likely to be persuaded by stories and anecdotes about the successes of vaccines,” the authors write. “Personal examples of children who were sick with vaccine-preventable illnesses can be much more effective than simply reading the numbers of children infected with a disease each year.”

The report also offers several suggestions for reducing the pain from administering vaccinations: administering vaccines quickly without aspirating; saving the most painful injection for last; holding the child upright; providing tactile stimulation; breastfeeding or providing sweet solutions and topical anesthetics after administration; and using distraction, such as deep breathing, pinwheels, or toys to decrease children’s pain and anxiety.

But the bottom line is that pediatricians have one key message they must communicate to parents, the report states: “The clear message parents should hear is that vaccines are safe and effective, and serious disease can occur if your child and family are not immunized.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

LAIV no better than IIV for influenza protection in children
MDedge Family Medicine
Mortality rates higher among influenza B patients than influenza A patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Myth of the Month: Vaccinations in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome
MDedge Family Medicine
Rotavirus vaccine again linked to small increase in risk of intussusception hospitalization
MDedge Family Medicine
Summer flu? Think variant swine influenza virus infection
MDedge Family Medicine
Hepatitis B vaccine response suppressed by maternal antibodies
MDedge Family Medicine
United States nears 1,400 cases of Zika in pregnant women
MDedge Family Medicine
Flu vaccine prevented hospitalizations in patients 50 and older
MDedge Family Medicine
HPV vaccination rates grow slowly
MDedge Family Medicine
Vaccine refusals and pediatrician dismissals increasing
MDedge Family Medicine