Factors affecting recommended childhood vaccine demand
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Date
2022
Authors
İkbal Ece Dizbay
Ömer Öztürkoǧlu
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IOS Press BV
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Reaching a high vaccination coverage level is of vital essence when preventing epidemic diseases. For mandatory vaccines the demand can be forecasted using some demographics such as birth rates or populations between certain ages. However it has been difficult to forecast non-mandatory vaccine demands because of vaccine hesitation alongside other factors such as social norms literacy rate or healthcare infrastructure. Consequently the purpose of this study is to explore the predominant factors that affect the non-mandatory vaccine demand focusing on the recommended childhood vaccines which are usually excluded from national immunization programs. For this study fifty-nine factors were determined and categorized as system-oriented and human-oriented factors. After a focus group study conducted with ten experts seven system-oriented and eight human-oriented factors were determined. To reveal the cause and effect relationship between factors one of the multi-criteria decision-making methods called Fuzzy-DEMATEL was implemented. The results of the analysis showed that 'Immunization-related beliefs' 'Media/social media contents/messaging' and 'Social cultural religious norms' have a strong influence on non-mandatory childhood vaccine demand. Furthermore whereas 'Availability and access to health care facilities' and 'Political/ financial support to health systems' are identified as cause group factors 'Quality of vaccine and service delivery management' is considered an effect group factor. Lastly a guide was generated for decision-makers to help their forecasting process of non-mandatory vaccine demands to avoid vaccine waste or shortage. © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Factor Relationship, Fuzzy Dematel, Vaccination Demand, Decision Making, Immunization, Population Statistics, Birth Rates, Dematel, Epidemic Disease, Factor Relationship, Fuzzy Dematel, Group Factor, Healthcare Infrastructure, Social Norm, Vaccination Demand, Vaccine Demand, Vaccines, Decision making, Immunization, Population statistics, Birth rates, DEMATEL, Epidemic disease, Factor relationship, Fuzzy DEMATEL, Group factor, Healthcare infrastructure, Social norm, Vaccination demand, Vaccine demand, Vaccines
Fields of Science
03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q

OpenCitations Citation Count
1
Source
Journal of Intelligent & Fuzzy Systems
Volume
42
Issue
Start Page
169
End Page
180
Collections
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Citations
CrossRef : 1
Scopus : 1
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 38
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