2021
DOI: 10.33631/duzcesbed.827142
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Covid-19 Pandemisi Döneminde Aşı Reddinin değerlendirilmesi

Abstract: Aşılar, tıbbın insanlığa sağladığı en büyük başarılar arasında olup bugüne kadar milyonlarca kişinin yaşamını kurtarmıştır. Ülkemizde 2017 yılında 23 binden fazla aile aşı reddi talebinde bulunmuştur. Geçmişte salgın hastalıkların yıkıcı etkilerinin pek çok sosyal, coğrafi, ekonomik, kültürel etkilere yol açtığı gözlenmiştir. Bu çalışmada amacımız; COVID-19 pandemisi sırasında Türkiye'de normalleşme sürecinin başlaması sonrasında, geçmişte çocuklarına aşı yaptırmayan ebeveynler ile görüşerek aşı reddi oranları… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
4
1

Citation Types

2
4
0
4

Year Published

2021
2021
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
5

Relationship

0
5

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 15 publications
(10 citation statements)
references
References 13 publications
2
4
0
4
Order By: Relevance
“…We observed that parents who were exposed to negative news and could not find the correct information or could not adequately distinguish between reliable and unreliable knowledge had more negative attitudes toward the COVID-19 vaccination. Our study results were in agreement with the results that parents who accessed the correct information and benefited from scientific pages on the Internet had more positive attitudes toward the COVID-19 vaccination in the literature ( Dağlı & Topkara, 2023 ; Engelbrecht et al, 2022 ; Kocamaz & Kocamaz, 2022 ; Siewchaisakul et al, 2022 ; Ünlü & Yıldıray, 2021 ; Yigit et al, 2021 ; Yıldız et al, 2021 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…We observed that parents who were exposed to negative news and could not find the correct information or could not adequately distinguish between reliable and unreliable knowledge had more negative attitudes toward the COVID-19 vaccination. Our study results were in agreement with the results that parents who accessed the correct information and benefited from scientific pages on the Internet had more positive attitudes toward the COVID-19 vaccination in the literature ( Dağlı & Topkara, 2023 ; Engelbrecht et al, 2022 ; Kocamaz & Kocamaz, 2022 ; Siewchaisakul et al, 2022 ; Ünlü & Yıldıray, 2021 ; Yigit et al, 2021 ; Yıldız et al, 2021 ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…With the opening of schools, the fact children were actively infected with COVID-19 and survived with mild symptoms may have reduced the perception of the need for vaccination. In addition, the low number of deaths from COVID-19 in children and the fact that COVID-19 often shows mild symptoms created the perception that it is not necessary to vaccinate children against COVID-19 ( Dağlı & Topkara, 2023 ; Kocamaz & Kocamaz, 2022 ; Ünlü & Yıldıray, 2021 ; Yigit et al, 2021 ; Yıldız et al, 2021 ). These factors may have led to a negative attitude toward the COVID-19 vaccine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This result is not consistent with some studies revealing that male individuals have more positive attitude toward getting the vaccine in literature. [19,20,[23][24][25] However, there is also a study revealing that women have more positive attitude toward the vaccine like in our study. [22] Women in reproductive age group can be more hesitant to get the vaccine due to the instinct to protect their reproductive health, fetus or babies they breastfeed; however, higher number of women in our study changed their minds in a positive way as they were old individuals whose reproductive age ended.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 39%
“…In a study in which 82 individuals refusing to get their children vaccinated were called to give information and in which the effect of COVID-19 on the decision of vaccination was investigated, none of the participants changed their minds on getting their children vaccinated after phone calls and 64.3% did not change their minds on getting themselves vaccinated. [23] According to the attitudes of the participants who did not get the vaccine, 89.3% of those who thought the vaccine was unnecessary, 76.9% of those who wanted to get the domestic vaccine, 71.7% of those who were afraid of vaccines, and 56% of those who could not get the vaccine due to diseases did not change their minds after the informative phone calls. High rates of participants who did not change their minds after the informative phone calls in the studies may be due to including individuals who support vaccine refusal in the study populations, personal characteristics that cannot be changed in a short time such as diseases and fear of vaccine and non-personal characteristics such as the desire of domestic vaccine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%