TY - JOUR
T1 - An instrument to measure psychosocial determinants of health care professionals’ vaccination behavior
T2 - Validation of the Pro-VC-Be questionnaire
AU - Verger, Pierre
AU - Fressard, Lisa
AU - Soveri, Anna
AU - Dauby, Nicolas
AU - Fasce, Angelo
AU - Karlsson, Linda
AU - Lewandowsky, Stephan
AU - Schmid, Philipp
AU - Dubé, Eve
AU - Gagneur, Arnaud
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Objectives: The lack of validated instruments assessing vaccine hesitancy/confidence among health care professionals (HCPs) for themselves, and their patients led us to develop and validate the Pro-VC-Be instrument to measure vaccine confidence and other psychosocial determinants of HCPs’ vaccination behavior among diverse HCPs in different countries. Methods: Cross-sectional survey in October-November 2020 among 1,249 GPs in France, 432 GPs in French-speaking parts of Belgium, and 1,055 nurses in Quebec (Canada), all participating in general population immunization. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses evaluated the instrument’s construct validity. We used HCPs’ self-reported vaccine recommendations to patients, general immunization activity, self-vaccination, and future COVID-19 vaccine acceptance to test criterion validity. Results: The final results indicated a 6-factor structure with good fit: vaccine confidence (combining complacency, perceived vaccine risks, perceived benefit-risk balance, perceived collective responsibility), trust in authorities, perceived constraints, proactive efficacy (combining commitment to vaccination and self-efficacy), reluctant trust, and openness to patients. The instrument showed good convergent and criterion validity and adequate discriminant validity. Conclusions: This study found that the Pro-VC-Be is a valid instrument for measuring psychosocial determinants of HCPs’ vaccination behaviors in different settings. Its validation is currently underway in Europe among various HCPs in different languages.
AB - Objectives: The lack of validated instruments assessing vaccine hesitancy/confidence among health care professionals (HCPs) for themselves, and their patients led us to develop and validate the Pro-VC-Be instrument to measure vaccine confidence and other psychosocial determinants of HCPs’ vaccination behavior among diverse HCPs in different countries. Methods: Cross-sectional survey in October-November 2020 among 1,249 GPs in France, 432 GPs in French-speaking parts of Belgium, and 1,055 nurses in Quebec (Canada), all participating in general population immunization. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses evaluated the instrument’s construct validity. We used HCPs’ self-reported vaccine recommendations to patients, general immunization activity, self-vaccination, and future COVID-19 vaccine acceptance to test criterion validity. Results: The final results indicated a 6-factor structure with good fit: vaccine confidence (combining complacency, perceived vaccine risks, perceived benefit-risk balance, perceived collective responsibility), trust in authorities, perceived constraints, proactive efficacy (combining commitment to vaccination and self-efficacy), reluctant trust, and openness to patients. The instrument showed good convergent and criterion validity and adequate discriminant validity. Conclusions: This study found that the Pro-VC-Be is a valid instrument for measuring psychosocial determinants of HCPs’ vaccination behaviors in different settings. Its validation is currently underway in Europe among various HCPs in different languages.
KW - Health care professionals
KW - questionnaire validation
KW - vaccination behaviors
KW - vaccine confidence
KW - vaccine hesitancy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85129004126&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14760584.2022.2046467
DO - 10.1080/14760584.2022.2046467
M3 - Article
C2 - 35238274
AN - SCOPUS:85129004126
SN - 1476-0584
VL - 21
SP - 693
EP - 709
JO - Expert Review of Vaccines
JF - Expert Review of Vaccines
IS - 5
ER -