Pediatricians’ Preferences for Infant Meningococcal Vaccination

Jan 1, 2015, 00:00
10.1016/j.jval.2014.10.010
https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/article/S1098-3015(14)04736-6/fulltext
Title : Pediatricians’ Preferences for Infant Meningococcal Vaccination
Citation : https://www.valueinhealthjournal.com/action/showCitFormats?pii=S1098-3015(14)04736-6&doi=10.1016/j.jval.2014.10.010
First page : 67
Section Title : Preference-Based Assessments
Open access? : No
Section Order : 14

Background

Meningococcal disease is rare but can cause death or disabilities. Although the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices has recommended meningococcal vaccination for at-risk children aged 9 through 23 months, it has not endorsed universal vaccination. Health insurance payments for the vaccination of children who are not at risk are likely to be limited. Use of infant meningococcal vaccines by these families will thus depend on the preferences of physicians who might recommend vaccination to parents, as well as parents’ preferences.

Objective

To quantify pediatricians’ preferences for specific features of hypothetical infant meningococcal vaccines.

Methods

A sample of pediatricians (n = 216) completed a Web-enabled, discrete choice experiment survey in which respondents chose between pairs of hypothetical vaccines in a series of trade-off questions. The questions described vaccines with six attributes. A random-parameters logit regression model was used to estimate the relative importance weights physicians place on vaccine features. These weights were used to calculate the predicted probability that a physician chooses hypothetical vaccines with given characteristics.

Results

Pediatricians’ choices indicated that increases in vaccine effectiveness were among the most important factors in their vaccine recommendations, followed by increases in the number of injections. The age at which protection begins and the number of additional office visits were less important. Whether a booster was required after 5 years was the least important factor in vaccine recommendations. The results suggest that virtually all (99.9%) physicians in the sample would recommend a vaccine even with the least-preferred features rather than no infant meningococcal vaccine.

Conclusions

Physicians’ responses indicate a strong preference for infant meningococcal vaccination.

Categories :
  • Methodological & Statistical Research
  • Preference Methods
  • Specialized Treatment Areas
  • Vaccines
Tags :
  • conjoint analysis
  • discrete choice experiment
  • infant vaccine
  • meningococcal disease
  • preference
Regions :
  • North America
ViH Article Tags :