Title: Vaccine Communication Skills: How to Speak with Vaccine-Hesitant Parents
1Vaccine Communication Skills How to Speak with
Vaccine-Hesitant Parents the Media
2Objectives
- Understand changing concerns of
vaccine-hesitant families - Gain skills best practices for effective
communication with vaccine hesitant families - Become more comfortable skills engaging the
media on vaccine issues. - Understand how these skills translate in the
advocacy arena (example of AB 2109).
3Vaccination is the top Public Health achievement
of the 20th Century
MMWR 1999 48241
42010 Practicing Pediatricians Top Vaccine
Safety Concerns of Patients/Families
- Autism
- Thimerosal
- Aluminum
- Pain of so many shots
- Why so many shots at once/so early? Concern
about overwhelming - the immune system.
- Have not seen these diseases so do not see the
value that outweighs any risk
52012 Vaccine-educated parents
- May be pro-vaccine for themselves, but object
to it for infants/children - May no longer believe in a vaccine-autism
connection (or at least will not say so) - Want green vaccinespure, natural (no
additives) - Overwhelming the young immune system 1
concern, many want alternative schedule
6More 2012 Parent Concerns
- General mistrust of scientific research/systems
of carefunding, motives (per shot payment) - My unvaccinated baby is healthier than
vaccinated children (rosy cheeks) - I am fine not caring about public healthmy
responsibility is MY child only - Highly influenced by non-MD providerschiropractor
s, nurses, midwives/doulas
7Kindergarten PBEs by County
2000
Lee et al NVIC 2010
8Do you matter?
9Do practicing MDs consider it important to
have effective vaccine communication skills?
- Many spoke to what a huge part of practice
vaccines have become. - Numerous spoke about the importance of these
skills for both general pediatricians and
subspecialists. - Importance of subspecialist supporting need for
vaccines, even in cases where they do not give
the vaccines themselves. -
- Also for many children with special health care
needs, the subspecialist is the medical home.
10Why Parents Who Planned To Delay/Refuse Vaccine
Changed Their Minds
Gust et al Pediatr 2009122718
11How can you respond?
12(No Transcript)
13From FFrom Practicing Pediatricians Best
Practices
14Practicing Pediatricians What I didnt think I
would do or see!
- Nearly all have learned to negotiate vaccines
for some families, using slightly modified
alternate schedules as part of routine
practice. (This requires diligence,
documentation and clear communication about
what is acceptable and what is not. This is NOT
about substituting a Sears-type schedule for
science.) - Many parents feel it is now due diligence to at
least question one or more vaccines, even if they
will readily accept them. - MD must deal with own anger/rejection at not
being trusted over vaccines.
15Listen first
Ask each family/parent what, if any, are their
concerns about vaccines. Having a prepared
spiel and spouting lots of science without
knowing what someones specific concerns are
wastes time and does not build trust.
16Assess depth of concern
- First tier Parents who want to exercise due
diligence. - Second tier One or more specific fears based on
myths in the media or from friends, that if
listened to and carefully responded, will set
aside. - Third tier those who are fearful of vaccines
either due to a close personal experience (a
sibling whose child had autism after a vaccine,
or had what they perceived as a bad adverse
reaction) or who refuse vaccines as part of a
larger life philosophy.
17Be ready for your own negative emotions.
- Doctors need to recognize that they need to
come to terms with emotions of anger or
disappointment in parents who listen to
celebrities or media rather than trained MDs, who
feel that they know what is best for the child.
Those emotions move beyond judgment to help the
patients.
18(No Transcript)
19Pre-empt resistance
- Begin at the first visit letting the family know
proactively their position as a doctor in strong
support of vaccines for their child. Give
websites you trust about vaccines. - Share if you vaccinate your own child/ your
niece, your nephew.
20Use stories rather than theories
- Focus on those diseases that are still seen and
they can understand, and tell stories about
children who did not get vaccines.
21Other Lessons Learned
- Maximize benefits to their child
- not a public health discussion
- vaccines provide protection
- risk of disease for omitted vaccines
22BOTTOM LINE
- This is not a debate, it is a conversation. It
doesnt matter if you are right it matters
what they want and decide to do.
23Working With the Media
- Improving the Value of Medical Journalism
- ltMedia slides courtesy of Val Ulene, LA Times
health columnistgt
24Why Engage the Media
- As a major source of medical information, the
media can be particularly important in educating
the general public, the medical community and
policy makers.
25- Most news articles on medically related topics
fail to discuss important issues such as evidence
quality, costs, and risks versus benefits
26(No Transcript)
27Barriers to Good Medical Reporting
- Lack of time
- Lack of space
- Lack of knowledge
28Overcoming Barriers What Can Doctors Do to Help
- Make yourself available
- Provide accurate, up-to-date information about
health-related topics - Be professional
- Tell a good story
29Should I Do the Interview?
- Find out what the reporter wants to know and what
their attitude toward the subject might be - Get to know the media outlet
- Determine if youre the right person to do the
interview - Decide whether its worth your time and energy
30- DONT BE AFRAID TO TURN DOWN AN INTERVIEW!
31Where Do People Get Their News?
32Use Social Media
- About a quarter (27) of adults say they
regularly or sometimes get news or news headlines
through Facebook, Twitter or other social
networking sites. - This rises to 38 of people younger than 30, but
now spans a notable share of older Americans (12
of those 65 and older) as well.
33Preparing for interviews
- Bring the journalist up to speed
- Get yourself up to speed
- Prepare and practice key message points
- Review facts and figures
- Identify questions (easy, hard and terrible) and
formulate responses
34The Interview
- Answer their questions in clear, concise, simple
language - Stick to what you know
- Take charge
- Take a stance
- Be enthusiastic!
35Avoid Getting Trapped
- Stay calm and positive
- Dont pretend to know something you dont know
- Correct inaccurate information
- If you make an error, correct yourself as soon as
possible - Theres no such thing as off the record
36Follow-up After an Interview
- Ask if youll have the opportunity to review and
correct the piece - Make yourself available for follow-up questions
37Dont Wait for Them to Call You!
- Send press releases
- Invite to press conferences
- Provide them with information kits
- Reach out to personal contacts
- Submit letters to the editors
- Write spec articles
38Not for today--AB 2109 (PAN) PBES
- REQUIRES HEALTH CARE PROVIDER SIGNATURE FOR PBE
- INTENDED TO DECREASE CONVENIENCE PBES WHILE STILL
PERMITTING PARENTAL CHOICE - BASED ON WASHINGTON STATE LAW SHOWING RESULTS
- LOW BURDEN TO MD PRACTICESFAX/EMAIL OK FEW
PATIENTS PER PRACTICE
39THANK YOU!