The measles outbreak in Florida, occurring just as health officials announced an official end to Philadelphia’s measles outbreak and rising global cases, has cast attention once again on concerns about vaccine hesitancy. In the midst of Florida’s surgeon general avoiding measles vaccination recommendations for parents, the American Academy of Pediatrics has updated its clinical guidance on vaccine communication.
“Disruption to routine pediatric vaccination during the COVID-19 pandemic has left many children vulnerable to vaccine-preventable diseases and more locations susceptible to outbreaks in the United States and around the world,” Sean T. O’Leary, MD, MPH, a pediatric infectious diseases specialist and associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado in Aurora, and his colleagues, wrote in the new report, published in the March issue of Pediatrics. “Geographic clustering of vaccine refusal further increases the risk of communicable disease outbreaks in certain communities even when vaccination rates at a state or national level remain high overall.”
The authors note that disease resurgence may bolster vaccine uptake, with media coverage of recent outbreaks linked to more pro-vaccine discussions and attitudes among parents. But the evidence on that remains inconclusive, and the authors point out the slow uptake in COVID-19 vaccination as parents navigate ongoing spread of both the disease and vaccine misinformation.
Conflicting Evidence on Postpandemic Attitudes
It remains unclear how parent attitudes toward vaccines have shifted, if at all, since the pandemic. A study published in Pediatrics from October 2023, which Dr. O’Leary also coauthored, analyzed data from an online survey of Colorado mothers between 2018 and 2021 and found no significant difference in vaccine hesitancy during the pandemic compared with pre-pandemic.
Among 3,553 respondents, 1 in 5 (20.4%) were vaccine hesitant overall. Though parents were twice as likely to feel uncertain in trusting vaccine information after the COVID-19 vaccines were authorized (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.14), they were half as likely to be unsure about hesitancy toward childhood vaccines (aOR 0.48).
Another study in Pediatrics from October 2023 found that common concerns about COVID-19 vaccines among parents included infertility, long-term effects from the vaccines, and effects on preexisting medical conditions. But even then, participants in focus groups “expressed that they would listen to their doctor for information about COVID-19 vaccines,” wrote Aubree Honcoop, MPS, of the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, and her colleagues.
“I think what we’re seeing, very importantly, is that physicians seem to be the source people rely on,” said Walter Orenstein, MD, professor of medicine and associate director of the Emory Vaccine Center at Emory University in Atlanta. “But we need to give the physicians time and incentives to spend time with families,” such as a billing code for vaccine counseling, he said.
Dr. Orenstein was surprised to see the results from Colorado, but he noted they were from a small survey in a single state. He pointed to other findings, such as those from the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Public Policy Center in November 2023, that found lower confidence overall among Americans toward vaccines.
Paul Offit, MD, director of the Vaccine Education Center and an attending infectious disease physician at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, where the city’s measles outbreak began, is similarly skeptical about the Colorado study’s findings that parent vaccine attitudes have changed little since the pandemic. At the AAP’s annual conference in October 2023, Dr. Offit asked pediatricians about their experiences while he signed books.
“I would ask, ‘So what’s it like out there? Are we winning or losing?’ ” he said. “I would say, to a person, everyone said they felt things were much worse now than they ever have been before.”