- Title
- Development and validation of the Vaccine Barriers Assessment Tool for identifying drivers of under-vaccination in children under five years in Australia
- Creator
- Kaufman, Jessica; Tuckerman, Jane; Bonner, Carissa; Durrheim, David N.; Costa, Daniel S. J.; Trevena, Lyndal; Henseler, Jörg; Danchin, Margie
- Relation
- Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics Vol. 20, Issue 1, no. 2359623
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2024.2359623
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2024
- Description
- Data on routine childhood vaccination coverage can only tell us who is under-vaccinated; it cannot explain why vaccine coverage is low. Collecting data on the reasons behind under-vaccination is necessary to implement cost-effective strategies that address key barriers and target interventions appropriately. However, no instruments that measure both vaccine acceptance and access factors among parents of children <5 y have been validated in high-income countries. This study aims to develop and validate the Vaccine Barriers Assessment Tool (VBAT) for Australia. We applied three phases of mixed methods data collection and analysis. In Phase 1, we developed a comprehensive list of 80 items reflecting all potential parental barriers to childhood vaccination, derived from published literature and behavioral theory. Through cognitive interviews (n = 28), we refined this list to 45 items. In Phase 2, we conducted a two-wave online survey to test the reliability and validity of these items in an Australian sample of parents (n = 532) with structural equation modeling, further refining the list to 35 items. In Phase 3, we conducted a final parent survey (n = 156), administering these items along with the Parent Attitudes toward Childhood Vaccination (PACV) scale for comparison. We reviewed participants’ immunization register data to assess the predictive validity of the proposed models. The final 6-item short form and 15-item long form Vaccine Barriers Assessment Tool assess access, communal benefit, personal risk, equity, commitment, social norms, and trust in health-care workers. It is being applied for national surveillance in Australia and will be adapted for additional populations and vaccines.
- Subject
- childhood vaccination; immunization; barriers; parents; children; vaccine acceptance
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1506522
- Identifier
- uon:55898
- Identifier
- ISSN:2164-5515
- Rights
- x
- Language
- eng
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