The Impact of Social Networks on Parents’ Vaccination Decisions

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Parents decide whether their children are vaccinated, but they rarely reach these decisions on their own. Instead parents are influenced by their social networks, broadly defined as the people and sources they go to for information, direction, and advice. This study used social network analysis to formally examine parents’ social networks (people networks and source networks) related to their vaccination decision-making. In addition to providing descriptions of typical networks of parents who conform to the recommended vaccination schedule (conformers) and those who do not (nonconformers), this study also quantified the effect of network variables on parents’ vaccination choices. METHODS: This study took place in King County, Washington. Participation was limited to US-born, first-time parents with children aged ≤18 months. Data were collected via an online survey. Logistic regression was used to analyze the resulting data. RESULTS: One hundred twenty-six conformers and 70 nonconformers completed the survey. Although people networks were reported by 95% of parents in both groups, nonconformers were significantly more likely to report source networks (100% vs 80%, P < .001). Model comparisons of parent, people, and source network characteristics indicated that people network variables were better predictors of parents’ vaccination choices than parents’ own characteristics or the characteristics of their source networks. In fact, the variable most predictive of parents’ vaccination decisions was the percent of parents’ people networks recommending nonconformity. CONCLUSIONS: These results strongly suggest that social networks, and particularly parents’ people networks, play an important role in parents’ vaccination decision-making.

[1]  Glen Nowak,et al.  Confidence about vaccines in the United States: understanding parents' perceptions. , 2011, Health affairs.

[2]  D. Gust,et al.  Association Between Health Care Providers' Influence on Parents Who Have Concerns About Vaccine Safety and Vaccination Coverage , 2006, Pediatrics.

[3]  S. Clark,et al.  Safety of vaccinations. Miss America, the media, and public health. , 1996, JAMA.

[4]  C. Jackson,et al.  A systematic review of decision support needs of parents making child health decisions , 2008, Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy.

[5]  L. Barker,et al.  Children who have received no vaccines: who are they and where do they live? , 2004, Pediatrics.

[6]  R. Silverman,et al.  Free-Riding, Fairness, and the Rights of Minority Groups in Exemption from Mandatory Childhood Vaccination , 2005, Human vaccines.

[7]  R. M. Wolfe,et al.  Vaccine Criticism on the World Wide Web , 2005, Journal of medical Internet research.

[8]  E. Brunson The Point of the Needle: An Anthropological Study of Childhood Vaccination in the United States , 2010 .

[9]  T. Davis,et al.  Childhood immunization refusal: provider and parent perceptions. , 2004, Family medicine.

[10]  E. Maibach,et al.  Do Parents Understand Immunizations? A National Telephone Survey , 2000, Pediatrics.

[11]  R. M. Wolfe,et al.  Content and design attributes of antivaccination web sites. , 2002, JAMA.

[12]  M. Rennels,et al.  The Use of Systemic Fluoroquinolones , 2006, Pediatrics.

[13]  L Nasir,et al.  Reconnoitering the antivaccination web sites: news from the front. , 2000, The Journal of family practice.

[14]  H. Akaike A new look at the statistical model identification , 1974 .

[15]  Patrick J. Leman,et al.  Factors underlying suboptimal childhood immunisation. , 2006, Vaccine.

[16]  Lucy Serpell,et al.  Parental decision-making in childhood vaccination. , 2006, Vaccine.

[17]  E. Miller,et al.  Impact of anti-vaccine movements on pertussis control: the untold story , 1998, The Lancet.

[18]  G. Zimet,et al.  Parental Beliefs and Decision Making About Child and Adolescent Immunization: From Polio to Sexually Transmitted Infections , 2005, Journal of developmental and behavioral pediatrics : JDBP.

[19]  B. Schwartz,et al.  Parents With Doubts About Vaccines: Which Vaccines and Reasons Why , 2008, Pediatrics.

[20]  Justin Lewis,et al.  Misleading media reporting? The MMR story , 2003, Nature Reviews Immunology.