Article Type
Changed
Display Headline
Vaccine Safety Is Top Concern for Parents

ATLANTA — Vaccine safety is the most important consideration for parents in deciding whether their teens should receive recommended vaccines, a national survey of parents showed.

The 557 respondents came from Harris Poll Online's survey panel, and each identified himself or herself as being the parent of at least one child aged 11-17 years, Dr. Stanley Schaffer of the University of Rochester (N.Y.) reported in a poster at the National Immunization Conference.

Parents most commonly cited vaccine safety as their single most important consideration in deciding whether their children should be immunized. Concerns about potential side effects were most pronounced for the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine; it was cited by 66% of parents of girls aged 11-14 years and 63% of parents of girls aged 15-17 years.

"While parents consider a number of factors when deciding whether or not to have their adolescents immunized, vaccine safety is clearly their No. 1 concern," Dr. Schaffer said in an interview. "By addressing parental concerns about the safety of vaccines with credible information and thereby reassuring parents, physicians, and others, health care providers can have a significant impact on efforts to immunize their patients and the adolescent population as a whole."
Dr. Schaffer said he had no conflicts of interest.

Author and Disclosure Information

Publications
Topics
Legacy Keywords
Dr. Stanley Schaffer, National Immunization Conference, human papillomavirus vaccine, HPV, Harris Poll , vaccination
Author and Disclosure Information

Author and Disclosure Information

ATLANTA — Vaccine safety is the most important consideration for parents in deciding whether their teens should receive recommended vaccines, a national survey of parents showed.

The 557 respondents came from Harris Poll Online's survey panel, and each identified himself or herself as being the parent of at least one child aged 11-17 years, Dr. Stanley Schaffer of the University of Rochester (N.Y.) reported in a poster at the National Immunization Conference.

Parents most commonly cited vaccine safety as their single most important consideration in deciding whether their children should be immunized. Concerns about potential side effects were most pronounced for the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine; it was cited by 66% of parents of girls aged 11-14 years and 63% of parents of girls aged 15-17 years.

"While parents consider a number of factors when deciding whether or not to have their adolescents immunized, vaccine safety is clearly their No. 1 concern," Dr. Schaffer said in an interview. "By addressing parental concerns about the safety of vaccines with credible information and thereby reassuring parents, physicians, and others, health care providers can have a significant impact on efforts to immunize their patients and the adolescent population as a whole."
Dr. Schaffer said he had no conflicts of interest.

ATLANTA — Vaccine safety is the most important consideration for parents in deciding whether their teens should receive recommended vaccines, a national survey of parents showed.

The 557 respondents came from Harris Poll Online's survey panel, and each identified himself or herself as being the parent of at least one child aged 11-17 years, Dr. Stanley Schaffer of the University of Rochester (N.Y.) reported in a poster at the National Immunization Conference.

Parents most commonly cited vaccine safety as their single most important consideration in deciding whether their children should be immunized. Concerns about potential side effects were most pronounced for the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine; it was cited by 66% of parents of girls aged 11-14 years and 63% of parents of girls aged 15-17 years.

"While parents consider a number of factors when deciding whether or not to have their adolescents immunized, vaccine safety is clearly their No. 1 concern," Dr. Schaffer said in an interview. "By addressing parental concerns about the safety of vaccines with credible information and thereby reassuring parents, physicians, and others, health care providers can have a significant impact on efforts to immunize their patients and the adolescent population as a whole."
Dr. Schaffer said he had no conflicts of interest.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Vaccine Safety Is Top Concern for Parents
Display Headline
Vaccine Safety Is Top Concern for Parents
Legacy Keywords
Dr. Stanley Schaffer, National Immunization Conference, human papillomavirus vaccine, HPV, Harris Poll , vaccination
Legacy Keywords
Dr. Stanley Schaffer, National Immunization Conference, human papillomavirus vaccine, HPV, Harris Poll , vaccination
Article Source

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article