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(A185) Did the Ministry of Health's Intervention Increase Compliance of Medical Teams to be Vaccinated against H1N1?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2011

B. Adini
Affiliation:
Emergency Division, Tel Aviv, Israel
D. Laor
Affiliation:
Tel Aviv, Israel
T. Hornik-Luria
Affiliation:
Tel Aviv, Israel
A. Goldberg
Affiliation:
Deputy Rector, Tel Aviv, Israel
L. Aharonson-Daniel
Affiliation:
Prepared Research Center, Tel Aviv, Israel
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Abstract

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Background

Pandemic influenza poses a great challenge to healthcare systems. Vaccinating medical teams and the population against pandemic influenza is the global recommended strategy to contain spread of the disease. As part of the efforts made to overcome the H1N1 pandemic, the Israeli Ministry of Health (MOH) initiated a general vaccination program for medical teams and the total country population. Due to low compliance rates of the medical staff, the MOH conducted regional conferences aimed at providing knowledge and encouraging staff to be vaccinated.

Objectives

To evaluate the effect of the regional conferences on the compliance rates amongst medical providers to be vaccinated against H1N1.

Methods

Medical providers from the primary health care services were invited to conferences that were conducted in 3 regions. Attitudes of the teams regarding compliance to be vaccinated were assessed pre and post the conferences. Additionally, the actual rates of vaccinations were recorded over the period of vaccination program. Actual compliance rates before and after the conferences were compared to detect differences as well as the relationship between teams' attitudes and actual vaccinations.

Results

Vaccination rates of medical providers remained low during the full vaccination period. Among the non-vaccinated, 24% to 29% reported before the conference that they agree to be vaccinated versus 57% to 62% following the conference. Analysis of the actual vaccination data among the medical providers did not demonstrate a change in compliance following the conferences and an overall decrease was noted after the first two weeks of the vaccinated project.

Conclusions

A statistically significant relationship was not found between reported attitudes of medical providers regarding readiness to be vaccinated and their actual vaccination. The MOH intervention did not achieve the expected result and did not raise compliance to be vaccinated.

Type
Abstracts of Scientific and Invited Papers 17th World Congress for Disaster and Emergency Medicine
Copyright
Copyright © World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine 2011