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izvor podataka: crosbi

Vaccination Attitudes and Experiences of Medical Doctors in Croatia amid the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Social Roles Conflict? (CROSBI ID 306820)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Miškulin, Maja ; Mujkić, Aida ; Miškulin, Ivan ; Lovrić Makarić, Zvjezdana ; Kovačević, Emma ; Pintarić, Ljiljana ; Pavić, Željko Vaccination Attitudes and Experiences of Medical Doctors in Croatia amid the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Social Roles Conflict? // Vaccines, 10 (2022), 3; 399, 20. doi: 10.3390/vaccines10030399

Podaci o odgovornosti

Miškulin, Maja ; Mujkić, Aida ; Miškulin, Ivan ; Lovrić Makarić, Zvjezdana ; Kovačević, Emma ; Pintarić, Ljiljana ; Pavić, Željko

engleski

Vaccination Attitudes and Experiences of Medical Doctors in Croatia amid the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Social Roles Conflict?

The study aimed to investigate the range of experiences and attitudes of Croatian medical doctors (MDs) related to vaccination and vaccine hesitancy. In January 2021 three asynchronous online focus groups were held using MRQual, a web- based platform, which included 46 MDs from all three levels of the healthcare system in Croatia. NVivo, a qualitative data analysis software package, was used for the thematic analysis of collected data. The participants expressed a high level of support for the Croatian immunization program and vaccines in general. However, some skepticism was expressed regarding new vaccines and the regulatory processes of their approval. A significant number of participants raised concerns over the approval of COVID-19 vaccines, especially given their rapid development. The results also revealed that the process of communication with patients is often based on the very elaborate categorizations of patients based on previous experience, which leads to prioritizing and a communication breakup when dealing with “problematic patients”. MDs find themselves in a delicate situation where a fine balance between time-consuming communication with patients and the demands for maintaining satisfying vaccination uptake is needed. The situation arises from a social roles conflict that is embedded in wider social values and expectations, since communication problems do not arise in the doctor’s office, and therefore cannot be solved without addressing the social forces that cause trust deficiencies. To achieve better immunization results public health leaders need to better understand the social contexts and constraints of MDs vaccine-related behaviors.

vaccine hesitancy ; communication ; healthcare workers ; medical doctors ; COVID-19 ; Croatia ; focus group ; qualitative research

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Podaci o izdanju

10 (3)

2022.

399

20

objavljeno

2076-393X

10.3390/vaccines10030399

Povezanost rada

Javno zdravstvo i zdravstvena zaštita, Sociologija

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