Face-to-face interventions for informing or educating parents about early childhood vaccination

May 9, 2018The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

In-person methods for informing parents about early childhood vaccines

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Abstract

Low-certainty evidence from seven studies suggests that face-to-face interventions may improve children's vaccination status by 20%.

  • Face-to-face interventions may slightly improve parental knowledge about vaccination, with moderate-certainty evidence indicating a standardised mean difference of 0.19.
  • Low-certainty evidence suggests that these interventions may improve parents' intention to vaccinate, with a standardised mean difference of 0.55.
  • There may be little or no change in parent attitudes or beliefs regarding vaccination, based on low-certainty evidence.
  • The interventions may not significantly affect parents' anxiety levels, as indicated by low-certainty evidence.
  • One study reported that the cost of the intervention for fully immunised children was approximately eight times higher than usual care.

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