Healthism vis-à-vis Vaccine Hesitancy: Insights from Parents Who Either Delay or Refuse Children’s Vaccination in Portugal
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The Context
2. Background
3. Methods
4. Results
4.1. Natural Birth
“[The clinic] is known for providing the most natural birth possible (…) It was highly recommended for those who wanted to have a non-medicated birth. So, basically, I went to the clinic a little bit against my will because at the time, I was trying to have a home birth. What happened was that, at the time, we were living in a rented house, and it did not have the conditions that my husband thought were ideal for the baby to be born at home.”Magda (41, one child)
“I think 90, over 95% of pregnancies, the obstetrician is just there to see the thing, right? The woman can do the job, she just needs the support but there is that 5% that makes the difference. So, I think the obstetrician’s role is really ‘ok, I am here just in case’ (laughs) is it not? And if anything happens, they are there to intervene and intervene well.”Nádia (41, one child)
4.2. Extended Breastfeeding
“We had already thought we had the intention of breastfeeding (…) It was mobilising resources so that I would have support regarding this aspect, right? Looking for people who could support me to achieve our goal as a family.”Marlene (40, one child)
4.3. Adoption of a Vegetarian/Macrobiotic Diet
“With Camila we look at her needs, and with Aurora we look at Aurora’s needs. It is by looking at the needs they have… And the stage of development they are in, that we adjust the diet. And that is why I say once again that it is a functional diet.”Mafalda (43, two children)
“As soon as we started introducing food, we had a nutritionist who accompanied us until he was 12 months old (…) With a child it is necessary to take a different kind of care and we wanted to know if we were doing things carefully and supplying all his nutritional needs …”Neuza (33, one child)
“… given the nutrient deficient foods we eat, lack of contact with pure environments, excessive pollution, overpopulated places where there is more disease contagion, the only way such a society, with the existing level of world population can function, is with vaccination.”Márcia (40, one child)
4.4. Preference for Alternative Educational Models
“The respect for the individual, the respect for nature and the integration of nature into the routines of Anselmo’s living. This is a methodology of much observation of the child, of… Many rituals. These are things that I also value, as a person, for me.”Marlene (40, one child)
“… the school is also more in the countryside and it is a school with a fairly large outdoor space (…) One of the main characteristics of that school is that children are very involved in the garden, they have a greenhouse and produce many things and help with the organic fertilizer, and go weeding and sowing and then the school also produces food hampers.”Madalena (36, one child)
“… it is a farm. My children love animals, bushland, farms, horses, they are very used to the outdoors and the school is a college, but outside is a huge farm, it is not a space between walls […] He has contact with animals: cow, chicken, dog, peacock. That was the key deciding factor.”Nicole (31, two children)
“(…) [public schools] have a pedagogical method and it is that pedagogical method for everyone. This is completely wrong. Teaching should be adapted to each child because each child is unique and special. And they are often very intelligent children, but they cannot adapt to that teacher’s methodology. And they are labelled as stupid (…) because they cannot understand the way the teacher is teaching them something.”Neide (37, three children)
“She went to home-schooling which is, like vaccination, a freedom of choice that we have in Portugal. It is not often recognised as, nowadays, it is almost false (…) So the law provides that parents have the right to choose the type of education they want to give to their children. At this stage, if we were to put our child in home-schooling, we would have to give in a legitimate document stating that this kind of teaching exists, together with a whole lot of other things, it´s rather a megalomaniac process.”Mafalda (43, two children)
4.5. Natural Medicine
“We are aware and we have confidence in the paediatrician that when we have tried everything and nothing is working, if the antibiotic is needed, the antibiotic is needed”(Nazaré, 33, one child)
“We always do prevention (…) it is a planning (…). Planning at a nutritional level, so we do supplementation, in order to prevent exactly that. There are periods of the year when we invest, like this one, in the immune system. And we do supplementation, vitamin C, vitamin D, zincs, all minerals, all that type.”Mafalda (43, two children)
“Using the natural method, watching for three days and seeing if it improves. (…) I did not give her antibiotics. (…) Then I went on to do a rosemary bath, citrine salt which is anti-sceptic…”.Nicole (31, two children)
4.6. Distrust in Science
“Why am I already going to interfere with this kid’s immune system when he is one or two days old to protect him from a disease that his mum might not even have, what is the likelihood of him getting it?”(Nádia, 41, one child)
“And then the hepatitis B [vaccine]… Which will be their choice when they get older, when they start having sex with other people. Then we have to rethink this vaccine. I feel that they will already be able to participate in the decision and to make their choice.”(Natália, 38, two children)
“I think that measles is a disease that anyone with a good, a strong immune system can cope with, I don’t know if there is a need for all the hysteria about measles.”(Márcia, 40, 1 child)
“[The polio vaccine] it is compulsory and the disease is totally eradicated. In other words, there has been no case of polio in Portugal or in other countries for some years now. Therefore, it is assumed that it is eradicated. (…) it doesn’t make much sense to have a vaccine now.”(Leonor, 46, 1 child)
“The conversation arises from why was this not done, do you have any idea, do you realise how dangerous this is … and how are we going to do it now? Are you not going to do it? The question is always this. Are you not going to do it? You are not going to vaccinate, is that it? And I never experienced the other side which is…let’s talk about it.”(Maria, 33, one child)
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
7. Study Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For further information on the methodology of the project please see: Cardano, M.; Numerato, D.; Gariglio, L.; Marhánková, J.; Scavarda, A.; Bracke, P.; Hilário, A.P.; Polak, P.; Hobson-West, P.; Vuolanto, P. A rapid team ethnography on vaccine hesitancy in Europe: methodological reflections, under review. |
2 | Health literacy is defined by the World Health Organization as representing “the cognitive and social skills which determine the motivation and ability of individuals to gain access to, understand and use information in ways which promote and maintain good health” [52] (p. 357). |
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Personal Information | Children’s Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pseudonym | Sex | Age | Academic Background | Professional Role | Number of Children | Children’s Age |
Mónica | Female | 38 | Degree in decorative arts | Farmer | 1 | 7 years old |
Manuel | Male | 45 | Master’s Degree | Musician; Teacher | 4 | 18, 18, 11 and 2.5 years old |
Maria | Female | 33 | Degree in Nursing | Nurse and Naturopath | 1 | 2 years old |
Madalena | Female | 36 | PhD Student | Researcher | 1 | 6 years old |
Mariana | Female | 40 | PhD | Social Psychologist; Researcher | 2 | 11 years old; 1 year and 10 months old |
Mafalda | Female | 43 | Postgraduate | Psychopedagogue | 2 | 14 and 7 years old |
Márcia | Female | 40 | Degree; (Master’s Degree student) | Anthropologist | 1 | 9 years old |
Miguel | Male | 54 | Degree in Agricultural Engineering | Technical Director of a Water and Environment Company | 4 | 20, 19, 5 years old and 1 month old |
Margarida | Female | 37 | Degree in Nursing | Farmer and information analyst | 1 | 5 years old |
Magda | Female | 41 | Degree in Physical Education | Businesswoman; Chiropractic student | 1 | 2 years and 4 months old |
Marina | Female | 44 | Master´s Degree in Health and Sports/Exercise | Doula; Personal Trainer | 2 | 17 and 15 years old |
Melissa | Female | 44 | Master’s Degree | Chiropractor (specialized in pregnant women and children) | 4 | 16, 14, 13 and 10 years old |
Marta | Female | 30 | Master’s Degree | Chiropractor | 2 | 6 and 5 years old |
Marlene | Female | 40 | Degree in Physiotherapy; postgraduate in Pediatric Physiotherapy | Doula; Physiotherapist | 1 | 5 years old |
Nádia | Female | 41 | Degree and postgraduate in immunology | Nutritionist | 1 | 6 years old |
Natália | Female | 38 | Degree in Psychology | Doula; Master’s Degree student in Clinical Psychology | 2 | 10 and 7 years old |
Mario | Male | 43 | PhD | Management consultant | 2 | 8 and 7 years old |
Natacha | Female | 36 | Degree in Nursing; Master’s Degree in Health Sociology; PhD in Sociology | Former nurse; Professor and Researcher at the Faculty of Medicine | 2 | 5 and 2 years old |
Noémia | Female | 39 | Degree in Design | Designer | 2 | 4 years and 3 months |
Núria | Female | 37 | Degree in Archaeology and Piano | Scientific Research Grant Holder FCT—in Music and History | 2 | 9 years and 15 months |
Nazaré | Female | 33 | Degree in Education | Doula | 1 | 4 years old |
Neide | Female | 37 | Secondary school | Doula | 3 | 17, 13 and 3 years old |
Nicole | Female | 31 | Degree in Engineering | Quality control in her family business; Doula | 2 | 4 and 2 years |
Neuza | Female | 33 | Degree in Nursing | Doula | 1 | 2 years and 5 months |
Naomi | Female | 44 | Secondary school | Yoga and Pilates teacher; Doula | 3 | 13, 11 and 8 years old |
Nadine | Female | 46 | Degree in Architecture | Doula | 4 | 18, 16, 14 and 10 years old |
Lara | Female | 41 | Degree in Nursing | Nurse in a health centre; Doula | 2 | 11 and 2 years and a half |
Laura | Female | 39 | Secondary school | Doula | 3 | 17, 15 and 3 years and 5 months |
Lisa | Female | 35 | Degree in Public Relations | Doula | 3 | 8, 7 and 4 years old |
Leonor | Female | 46 | PhD in Educational Science | Natural Science Teacher and Women’s Health Therapist | 1 | 13 years old |
Letícia | Female | 45 | Degree in Nursing | Doula; Independent specialist nurse in maternal health | 3 | 9, 5 and 4 years old |
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Mendonça, J.; Hilário, A.P. Healthism vis-à-vis Vaccine Hesitancy: Insights from Parents Who Either Delay or Refuse Children’s Vaccination in Portugal. Societies 2023, 13, 184. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080184
Mendonça J, Hilário AP. Healthism vis-à-vis Vaccine Hesitancy: Insights from Parents Who Either Delay or Refuse Children’s Vaccination in Portugal. Societies. 2023; 13(8):184. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080184
Chicago/Turabian StyleMendonça, Joana, and Ana Patrícia Hilário. 2023. "Healthism vis-à-vis Vaccine Hesitancy: Insights from Parents Who Either Delay or Refuse Children’s Vaccination in Portugal" Societies 13, no. 8: 184. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080184
APA StyleMendonça, J., & Hilário, A. P. (2023). Healthism vis-à-vis Vaccine Hesitancy: Insights from Parents Who Either Delay or Refuse Children’s Vaccination in Portugal. Societies, 13(8), 184. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc13080184