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Quantifying Stated Preferences for Meningococcal Vaccines Among Adolescents/Young Adults and Parents of Adolescents in the United States: A Discrete Choice Experiment.

Shahina BegumEliazar Sabater CabreraOscar Herrera RestrepoCindy BurmanWoo-Yun SohnElise J KuylenHiral Anil ShahZeki Kocaata
Published in: Infectious diseases and therapy (2024)
Adolescents/young adults and parents demonstrated a significant preference for a meningococcal vaccine that is more convenient (such as combined MenABCWY). Parents' vaccination preferences differed by income level and out-of-pocket costs, suggesting financial barriers to vaccination may exist which could result in IMD prevention inequalities. Findings from this study provide important information to support patient-facing informed policy discussions. A simplified vaccination schedule and strong recommendation could help improve vaccine uptake, schedule compliance, disease prevention, and reduce inequalities in IMD risk and prevention. A graphical abstract is available with this article.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • childhood cancer
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  • mental health
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  • health insurance