Vaccination Status and Attitudes towards Vaccines in a Cohort of Patients with Celiac Disease
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Statistical Analysis
2.3. Ethics
3. Results
Questionnaire Analysis
4. Discussion
4.1. Vaccine Hesitancy in General Population
- Hesitant: concerned about the safety of vaccines and unsure about needs, procedures, and timetables.
- Disinterested: with little awareness of vaccination (considered a low priority) and inadequate perception of the risk of preventable diseases.
- Excluded: disadvantaged with limited or difficult access to treatment for social, economic, and integration reasons.
- Anti-vaccinationists: with an attitude of rejection and active resistance due to personal, cultural, and religious convictions.
4.2. Impressions on Vaccinations Status and Attitudes among Patients with Celiac Disease
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
4.4. Possible Strategies to Improve Vaccination Coverage among Celiac Patients
- Improving the involvement for vaccine prescription of HCPs that regularly care for CD patients, such as gastroenterologists, internists, general practitioners, and nutritionists.
- Promoting guidelines that provide specific indications on how to actively call for vaccination, especially in relation to young, adult, and elderly patients with CD/CD refractory disease and other chronic gastrointestinal diseases.
- Spreading of vaccination culture, through the diffusion of the vaccination message to all patients, with the help of patients’ associations.
- Optimizing the patient–doctor communication for those patients with a higher probability of being hesitant against vaccines (e.g., CAM users, patients with a previous personal experience, lower educational level).
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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A | Sociodemographic information including gender, age, nationality, level of education, marital status, parental status, and work activities (specifically if healthcare providers). |
B | Information regarding the course of celiac disease, in terms of disease classification (e.g., refractory celiac disease, non-celiac gluten sensibility), disease duration, therapies, and adherence to the gluten-free diet. |
C | Lifestyle, health-related behaviors, and attitudes, including smoking, physical activity, and approach to screening services. |
D | Knowledge and perceptions regarding vaccination and vaccine-preventable diseases. |
E | Vaccination history. |
F | Sources of information on vaccines such as general practitioners, the mass media, and pharmacists. |
G | Reports by people close to the respondent regarding vaccines and adverse events. |
Characteristics | n (%) | CI 95% (%) |
---|---|---|
Gender | ||
Male | 25 (19.2) | 13–27.3 |
Female | 105 (80.8) | 72.7–87.0 |
Age (years), mean (range) | 40 (36–51) | |
Marital status | ||
Married/cohabitant | 92 (70.8) | 62.7–78.9 |
Single/divorced/widowed | 38 (29.2) | 21.1–37.3 |
Educational level | ||
Undergraduate | 58 | 44.6 |
Graduate | 72 | 55.4 |
Number of family members | ||
≤2 members | 49 | 37.7 |
>2 members | 81 | 62.3 |
Disease | ||
Celiac disease | 130 (100) | N.V. |
Working as healthcare professionals | ||
No | 120 | 92.3 |
Yes | 10 | 7.7 |
Profession | ||
Manager/entrepreneur/freelancer | 28 | 21.5 |
Employee/technical profession | 82 | 63.1 |
Manual work/craftsman | 7 | 5.4 |
Student/housewife/elderly/unemployed | 13 | 10 |
Alcohol intake | ||
No | 57 | 43.8 |
Yes often/minimal consumption | 73 | 56.2 |
Self-reported active lifestyle | ||
No | 48 | 36.9 |
Yes | 82 | 63.1 |
Vegetarian or vegan diet | ||
No | 123 | 94.6 |
Yes | 7 | 5.4 |
Smoking habit | ||
Non-smoker | 114 | 87.7 |
Smoker/ex-smoker | 16 | 12.3 |
Use of complementary and alternative medicines | ||
No | 118 | 90.8 |
Yes | 12 | 9.2 |
Years from diagnosis | ||
<5 years | 16 | 12.3 |
5–10 years | 38 | 29.2 |
>10 years | 76 | 58.5 |
Previous Vaccines | n (%) | CI 95% (%) |
---|---|---|
Tetanus | 96 (73.8) | 67.5–78.9 |
Flu | 55 (42.3) | 38.5–45.5 |
Measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) | 26 (20.0) | 16.4–25.6 |
Meningitis | 25 (19.2) | 14.7–23.2 |
Pneumococcus (PCV13 or PPSV23) | 21 (16.2) | 13.5–19.8 |
Patients who did not remember previous vaccines | 32 (24.6) | 19.2–28.7 |
n (%) | CI 95% (%) | |
---|---|---|
Attitudes towards vaccinations | ||
Negative | 1 (0.8) | 0.3–2.5 |
Positive | 104 (80.0) | 74.2–86.5 |
Partially positive/negative | 25 (19.2) | 15.8–22.6 |
Willingness to get vaccinated again in the future | ||
No | 10 (7.7) | 5.1–9.4 |
Yes | 120 (92.3) | 88.5–95.2 |
Willingness to vaccinate your children in future (n = 112) | ||
No | 2 (1.8) | 0.6–3.4 |
Yes, totally | 93 (83.0) | 78.6–86.7 |
Yes, partially | 17 (15.2) | 12.4–18.9 |
Belief in possible return of VPDs with Decline of vaccination coverage | ||
No | 14 (10.8) | 7.9–13.5 |
Yes | 116 (89.2) | 84.5–93.6 |
Best strategy to prevent VPDs | ||
Vaccination | 50 (38.4) | 34.6–41.9 |
Vaccination + other strategies | 79 (60.8) | 57.2–63.4 |
Other (diet, physical activity, homeopathy, etc.) | 1 (0.8) | 0.4–2.2 |
Celiac disease/ongoing therapy as motivation for previous vaccinations done | ||
No | 115 (88.5) | 82.6–91.8 |
Yes | 15 (11.5) | 8.6–14.6 |
Previous negative experiences with vaccines (personal/family members/relatives reported/referred) | ||
No | 105 (80.8) | 76.5–84.6 |
Yes | 25 (19.2) | 16.3–23.4 |
Higher confidence in vaccines from healthcare professionals compared to mass media | ||
No | 7 (5.4) | 3.2–7.8 |
Yes | 123 (94.6) | 91.3–97.6 |
Crude OR | CI 95% | p Value | AdjOR | CI 95% | p Value | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | ||||||
Male | ref | 0.56 | ||||
Female | 0.71 | (0.22–2.28) | ||||
Age in years (continuous variable) | 0.99 | (0.96–1.03) | 0.73 | |||
Marital status | ||||||
Single/divorced/widowed | ref | 0.25 | ||||
Married or cohabitant | 0.53 | (0.18–1.52) | ||||
Children <10 years of age | ||||||
No | ref | 0.71 | ||||
Yes | 1.29 | (0.34–4.82) | ||||
Educational level | ||||||
Undergraduates/non-graduates | ref | <0.05 | ref | <0.01 | ||
Graduate | 2.21 | (1.12–5.39) | 7.49 | (1.74–32.1) | ||
Working as healthcare professionals | ||||||
No | ref | 0.22 | ||||
Yes | 0.37 | (0.08–1.68) | ||||
Adherence to gluten-free diet | ||||||
No | ref | 0.35 | ||||
Yes | 3.90 | (0.39–35.2) | ||||
Smoking habit | ||||||
No | ref | 0.89 | ||||
Yes | 0.65 | (0.24–1.45) | ||||
Self-reported regular physical activity | ||||||
No | ref | 0.52 | ||||
Yes | 1.33 | (0.55–3.19) | ||||
Alcohol intake (2–3 units/day or more) | ||||||
No | ref | 0.79 | ||||
Yes | 0.89 | (0.47–1.89) | ||||
Use of complementary and alternative medicines | ||||||
No | ref | <0.05 | ref | <0.05 | ||
Yes | 0.13 | (0.04–0.48) | 0.11 | (0.01–0.71) | ||
Adherence to other preventive measures (e.g., oncological screenings) | ||||||
No | ref | 0.36 | ||||
Yes | 0.51 | (0.14–1.88) | ||||
Willingness to be vaccinated in future (even against COVID-19 and other vaccines) | ||||||
No | ref | <0.001 | ref | <0.01 | ||
Yes | 10.3 | (3.91–27.1) | 8.78 | (2.40–32.1) | ||
Considering possible return of VPDs with decline of vaccination coverages | ||||||
No | ref | <0.01 | ref | <0.05 | ||
Yes | 6.22 | (1.87–20.7) | 7.42 | (1.32–41.6) | ||
Previous negative experience with vaccinations (personal, family members, relatives, or also reported/referred) | ||||||
No | ref | <0.01 | ref | <0.01 | ||
Yes | 0.21 | (0.08–0.55) | 0.16 | (0.04–0.62) | ||
Higher confidence in vaccines in healthcare professionals compared to mass media | ||||||
No | ref | 0.14 | ref | 0.09 | ||
Yes | 3.26 | (0.68–15.6) | 6.54 | (0.76–56.1) |
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Costantino, A.; Michelon, M.; Roncoroni, L.; Doneda, L.; Lombardo, V.; Costantino, C.; Vecchi, M.; Elli, L. Vaccination Status and Attitudes towards Vaccines in a Cohort of Patients with Celiac Disease. Vaccines 2022, 10, 1199. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10081199
Costantino A, Michelon M, Roncoroni L, Doneda L, Lombardo V, Costantino C, Vecchi M, Elli L. Vaccination Status and Attitudes towards Vaccines in a Cohort of Patients with Celiac Disease. Vaccines. 2022; 10(8):1199. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10081199
Chicago/Turabian StyleCostantino, Andrea, Marco Michelon, Leda Roncoroni, Luisa Doneda, Vincenza Lombardo, Claudio Costantino, Maurizio Vecchi, and Luca Elli. 2022. "Vaccination Status and Attitudes towards Vaccines in a Cohort of Patients with Celiac Disease" Vaccines 10, no. 8: 1199. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10081199
APA StyleCostantino, A., Michelon, M., Roncoroni, L., Doneda, L., Lombardo, V., Costantino, C., Vecchi, M., & Elli, L. (2022). Vaccination Status and Attitudes towards Vaccines in a Cohort of Patients with Celiac Disease. Vaccines, 10(8), 1199. https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10081199