The impact of vaccination and patient characteristics on influenza vaccination uptake of elderly people: A discrete choice experiment

Esther W. de Bekker-Grob*, Jorien Veldwijk, Marcel Jonker, Bas Donkers, Jan Huisman, Sylvia Buis, Joffre Swait, Emily Lancsar, Cilia L.M. Witteman, Gouke Bonsel, Patrick Bindels

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Objectives: To improve information for patients and to facilitate a vaccination coverage that is in line with the EU and World Health Organization goals, we aimed to quantify how vaccination and patient characteristics impact on influenza vaccination uptake of elderly people. Methods: An online discrete choice experiment (DCE) was conducted among 1261 representatives of the Dutch general population aged 60 years or older. In the DCE, we used influenza vaccination scenarios based on five vaccination characteristics: effectiveness, risk of severe side effects, risk of mild side effects, protection duration, and absorption time. A heteroscedastic multinomial logit model was used, taking scale and preference heterogeneity (based on 19 patient characteristics) into account. Results: Vaccination and patient characteristics both contributed to explain influenza vaccination uptake. Assuming a base case respondent and a realistic vaccination scenario, the predicted uptake was 58%. One-way changes in vaccination characteristics and patient characteristics changed this uptake from 46% up to 61% and from 37% up to 95%, respectively. The strongest impact on vaccination uptake was whether the patient had been vaccinated last year, whether s/he had experienced vaccination side effects, and the patient's general attitude towards vaccination. Conclusions: Although vaccination characteristics proved to influence influenza vaccination uptake, certain patient characteristics had an even higher impact on influenza vaccination uptake. Policy makers and general practitioners can use these insights to improve their communication plans and information regarding influenza vaccination for individuals aged 60 years or older. For instance, physicians should focus more on patients who had experienced side effects due to vaccination in the past, and policy makers should tailor the standard information folder to patients who had been vaccinated last year and to patient who had not.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1467-1476
    Number of pages10
    JournalVaccine
    Volume36
    Issue number11
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 7 Mar 2018

    Keywords

    • Age Factors
    • Aged
    • Aged, 80 and over
    • Choice Behavior
    • Female
    • Geriatric Assessment
    • Humans
    • Influenza Vaccines
    • Influenza, Human
    • Male
    • Middle Aged
    • Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
    • Patient Acceptance of Health Care
    • Socioeconomic Factors
    • Surveys and Questionnaires
    • Vaccination
    • Journal Article
    • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    • Influenza, Human/epidemiology
    • Influenza Vaccines/administration & dosage
    • Outcome Assessment, Health Care
    • Vaccination uptake
    • Vaccination characteristics
    • Influenza vaccination
    • Patient characteristics
    • Discrete choice experiment

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