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Internet Exposure Associated With Canadian Parents’ Perception of Risk on Childhood Immunization: Cross-Sectional Study

机译:与加拿大父母对儿童免疫风险的感知有关的互联网暴露:跨部门研究

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Background: There is a large presence of provaccination and antivaccination content on the Internet. The Internet has been identified as an important source for parents to seek and share vaccine information. There are concerns that parental fears or hesitancy on childhood immunizations are increasing due to the popularity of social media and exposure to online antivaccination sentiment. No other studies have investigated the association between seeking vaccine information online and Canadian parents’ perception of risk on childhood immunization. Objective: We aimed to investigate the potential association between seeking vaccine information on the Internet and Canadian parents’ perception of risk on childhood immunization in order to quantify the perceived association and increase our understanding on the impact of the Internet to help guide public health interventions. Methods: We analyzed this association in two population samples: a self-selecting Web-based sample of Canadian parents recruited through Facebook (n=966) and a population-based sample of parents recruited by random digit dialing (RDD; n=951). The outcome was parental perception of vaccine safety on a seven-point ordinal scale from “not safe” to “extremely safe.” An ordinal regression model was used to investigate if Internet information seeking on childhood vaccination predicted parental perception of vaccine safety. Results: After adjusting for income level, Internet reliability, age of parent, and region, the odds of perceiving vaccines as less safe rather than more safe were 1.6 times higher (95% CI 1.3-2.1) for parents who used the Internet to search for vaccination information compared to parents who did not search the Internet in the Web-based sample, and 2.0 times higher (95% CI 1.6-2.5) in the population-based RDD sample. Conclusions: The results suggest the Internet is significantly associated with Canadian parents’ negative perception of vaccine risk. Governmental and scientific sectors should consider the development and implementation of Web-based vaccine interventions to promote confidence in immunization.
机译:背景:Internet上大量存在疫苗和抗疫苗内容。互联网被认为是父母寻找和共享疫苗信息的重要来源。人们担心,由于社交媒体的普及和在线反疫苗接种情绪的暴露,父母对儿童免疫接种的恐惧或犹豫正在增加。没有其他研究调查在线寻求疫苗信息与加拿大父母对儿童免疫风险的认识之间的联系。目的:我们旨在调查在互联网上寻找疫苗信息与加拿大父母对儿童免疫风险的感知之间的潜在关联,以便量化感知的关联并增进我们对互联网影响的理解,以帮助指导公共卫生干预措施。方法:我们在两个人群样本中分析了这种关联:通过脸书招募的加拿大父母的基于网络的自我选择样本(n = 966)和通过随机数字拨号招募的父母群体的样本(RDD; n = 951) 。结果是父母对疫苗安全性的看法从“不安全”到“极度安全”有七个等级。使用序数回归模型来调查寻求儿童接种疫苗的互联网信息是否预测了父母对疫苗安全性的看法。结果:在调整了收入水平,互联网的可靠性,父母的年龄和地区之后,使用互联网进行搜索的父母认为疫苗安全性差于安全性的几率高出1.6倍(95%CI 1.3-2.1)与在基于Web的样本中未搜索Internet的父母相比,其接种信息要高得多,而在基于人群的RDD样本中,其接种信息要高2.0倍(95%CI 1.6-2.5)。结论:结果表明,互联网与加拿大父母对疫苗风险的消极看法密切相关。政府和科学部门应考虑开发和实施基于网络的疫苗干预措施,以增强对免疫的信心。

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