Decision-Making about COVID-19 Vaccines among Health Care Workers and Their Adolescent Children.
Lisa N MansfieldKristen R ChoiJeanne R DelgadoMayra MaciasCorrine Munoz-PlazaBruno LewinDavid BronsteinJohn ChangKatia BruxvoortPublished in: Western journal of nursing research (2023)
Health care workers promote COVID-19 vaccination for adolescent patients, and as parents, may influence their own children to get vaccinated. We conducted virtual, semi-structured qualitative interviews with vaccinated health care workers and their adolescent children to explore their decision-making process for COVID-19 vaccination. In total, 21 health care workers (physicians, nurses, and medical staff) and their adolescent children ( N = 17) participated in interviews. The following three themes described parent-adolescent decision-making for COVID-19 vaccination: (1) family anticipation and hesitation about COVID-19 vaccine approval; (2) parents' or adolescents' choice: the decision maker for adolescent COVID-19 vaccination; and (3) leveraging one's vaccination status to encourage others to get vaccinated. Nurses encouraged adolescent autonomy in decisions for COVID-19 vaccination while physicians viewed vaccination as the parent's decision. Health care workers and their adolescent children used role-modeling to motivate unvaccinated peers and may model their decision-making process for adolescent COVID-19 vaccination with their own children to support their patients' and parents' vaccine decisions.
Keyphrases
- young adults
- coronavirus disease
- decision making
- sars cov
- mental health
- childhood cancer
- end stage renal disease
- primary care
- ejection fraction
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- physical activity
- patient reported
- systematic review
- patient reported outcomes