A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.

Access to the influenza vaccine pose little barriers in developed countries such as Singapore and vaccination against influenza is highly recommended for at-risk populations including older adults. However, vaccination rates are much lower than recommended despite the significant morbidity and morta...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christopher L Cummings, Wei Yi Kong, Jeanette Orminski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232472
id doaj-f42b39f8905d4905b16148dc5f69c680
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f42b39f8905d4905b16148dc5f69c6802021-03-03T21:46:30ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01155e023247210.1371/journal.pone.0232472A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.Christopher L CummingsWei Yi KongJeanette OrminskiAccess to the influenza vaccine pose little barriers in developed countries such as Singapore and vaccination against influenza is highly recommended for at-risk populations including older adults. However, vaccination rates are much lower than recommended despite the significant morbidity and mortality associated with the disease among this vulnerable population. Given timely goals to increase vaccine acceptance and uptake, we explored Singaporean older adults' misperceptions about influenza disease and vaccine. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted among 76 Singaporean adults aged 65 and above with no focus on a specific area in Singapore. Data were analyzed with grounded theory methods to understand participants' attitudes, perceptions, and knowledge. We developed in vivo codes that reflect the verbiage used by participants and exhaustively catalogued themes through a constant comparison coding method. Focusing specifically on older adults' misperceptions, seven main themes about influenza disease or vaccine emerged from our data analysis: familiarity with influenza, misperceptions about influenza, personal susceptibility to influenza, familiarity with the influenza vaccine, misperceptions about the influenza vaccine, misperceptions about influenza vaccine usage, and opinions about and barriers to influenza vaccine uptake. Notably, there is a lack of adequate knowledge and motivation in vaccinating against influenza among older adults in Singapore. Health communication needs to be more tailored toward older adults' message processing systems and engage health professionals' involvement in addressing the influenza disease and vaccine misperceptions identified in this study.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232472
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher L Cummings
Wei Yi Kong
Jeanette Orminski
spellingShingle Christopher L Cummings
Wei Yi Kong
Jeanette Orminski
A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Christopher L Cummings
Wei Yi Kong
Jeanette Orminski
author_sort Christopher L Cummings
title A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.
title_short A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.
title_full A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.
title_fullStr A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.
title_full_unstemmed A typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in Singapore.
title_sort typology of beliefs and misperceptions about the influenza disease and vaccine among older adults in singapore.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Access to the influenza vaccine pose little barriers in developed countries such as Singapore and vaccination against influenza is highly recommended for at-risk populations including older adults. However, vaccination rates are much lower than recommended despite the significant morbidity and mortality associated with the disease among this vulnerable population. Given timely goals to increase vaccine acceptance and uptake, we explored Singaporean older adults' misperceptions about influenza disease and vaccine. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted among 76 Singaporean adults aged 65 and above with no focus on a specific area in Singapore. Data were analyzed with grounded theory methods to understand participants' attitudes, perceptions, and knowledge. We developed in vivo codes that reflect the verbiage used by participants and exhaustively catalogued themes through a constant comparison coding method. Focusing specifically on older adults' misperceptions, seven main themes about influenza disease or vaccine emerged from our data analysis: familiarity with influenza, misperceptions about influenza, personal susceptibility to influenza, familiarity with the influenza vaccine, misperceptions about the influenza vaccine, misperceptions about influenza vaccine usage, and opinions about and barriers to influenza vaccine uptake. Notably, there is a lack of adequate knowledge and motivation in vaccinating against influenza among older adults in Singapore. Health communication needs to be more tailored toward older adults' message processing systems and engage health professionals' involvement in addressing the influenza disease and vaccine misperceptions identified in this study.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232472
work_keys_str_mv AT christopherlcummings atypologyofbeliefsandmisperceptionsabouttheinfluenzadiseaseandvaccineamongolderadultsinsingapore
AT weiyikong atypologyofbeliefsandmisperceptionsabouttheinfluenzadiseaseandvaccineamongolderadultsinsingapore
AT jeanetteorminski atypologyofbeliefsandmisperceptionsabouttheinfluenzadiseaseandvaccineamongolderadultsinsingapore
AT christopherlcummings typologyofbeliefsandmisperceptionsabouttheinfluenzadiseaseandvaccineamongolderadultsinsingapore
AT weiyikong typologyofbeliefsandmisperceptionsabouttheinfluenzadiseaseandvaccineamongolderadultsinsingapore
AT jeanetteorminski typologyofbeliefsandmisperceptionsabouttheinfluenzadiseaseandvaccineamongolderadultsinsingapore
_version_ 1714815220497514496