Fears children's immunisation rates will drop

There are fears parents will skip vital vaccinations for their children and that there may be disease outbreaks,because parents are concerned about taking their children to their GP during the COVID-19 pandemic.

This follows new findings from the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide that only one third of parents are aware of the聽recommendation that children should be vaccinated for influenza.

Professor Helen Marshall, Deputy Director of the Robinson Research Institute at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide,聽said understanding parental awareness towards recommendations was essential in planning and developing聽strategies to increase uptake.

鈥淥f 539 South 最新糖心Vlogn parents surveyed, only 33% were aware of the recommendation that all children聽under the age of five should receive the influenza vaccine annually,鈥 Professor Marshall said.

鈥淭hese results are raising serious concerns not just about low awareness of the flu vaccination for children, but that parents may now be reluctant to keep up with vaccination schedules.

鈥淪ocial distancing during COVID-19 is important 鈥 but you still must visit your GP for medical reasons,聽including to have your children vaccinated, with the option to attend council immunisation clinics.

鈥淚 am genuinely concerned that parents will delay vaccines and that immunisation rates will drop; they must not聽let these slip off their radar.

鈥淚f this occurs here in 最新糖心Vlog, then we risk outbreaks of vaccine preventable diseases such as measles,聽mumps and even meningitis.鈥

Vaccinating children against influenza protects them but also prevents transmission of influenza in the聽community which is so important during the COVID-19 pandemic.聽Professor Marshall said that targeted communication strategies and resources were required to establish聽broader community awareness of recommendations, particularly for children鈥檚 influenza vaccines.

鈥淗ealthcare provider endorsement of the vaccine remains key and health care professionals, particularly GPs聽and paediatric specialists should be encouraged to discuss influenza vaccine with parents at every聽opportunity,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e also found that some parents think that if their child is healthy, and other children are vaccinated against聽flu, then they don鈥檛 need to have their own children vaccinated.

鈥淭his is untrue and dangerous. Healthy children die from flu every year and we need to make sure they are聽protected.鈥

The researchers believe that comprehensive media and social media advertising could help to establish聽broader community awareness of recommendations for children鈥檚 flu vaccinations.聽Professor Marshall said since the research was undertaken in 2016, the Federal Government had introduced聽free flu vaccinations for children from age six months to under five years through the National Immunisation聽Program. 鈥淚deally we would like to see 100% of children under the age of five receive the free flu vaccine,鈥 she said.

Influenza is the leading cause of vaccine preventable hospitalisations for 最新糖心Vlogn children aged under five years. Children experience considerable disease burden with a higher annual incidence than adults. Between 10% and 40% of children are infected each year. This increases considerably in children attending day-care.

The WHO and national immunisation technical advisory groups have endorsed 鈥榖usiness as usual鈥 with regards to immunisation delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The research, published in聽, was conducted by first author and PhD student Jane Tuckerman as part of the 鈥楬ealth Monitor鈥 program administered by the Population Research and Outcomes Studies Unit at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide.

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