Expert Review of Vaccines (Dec 2023)

International adaptation and validation of the Pro-VC-Be: measuring the psychosocial determinants of vaccine confidence in healthcare professionals in European countries

  • Amanda Garrison,
  • Linda Karlsson,
  • Lisa Fressard,
  • Angelo Fasce,
  • Fernanda Rodrigues,
  • Philipp Schmid,
  • Frederike Taubert,
  • Dawn Holford,
  • Stephan Lewandowsky,
  • Peter Nynäs,
  • Emma C. Anderson,
  • Arnaud Gagneur,
  • Eve Dubé,
  • Anna Soveri,
  • Pierre Verger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14760584.2023.2242479
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 726 – 737

Abstract

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Background Healthcare professionals (HCPs) play an important role in vaccination; those with low confidence in vaccines are less likely to recommend them to their patients and to be vaccinated themselves. The study’s purpose was to adapt and validate long- and short-form versions of the International Professionals’ Vaccine Confidence and Behaviors (I-Pro-VC-Be) questionnaire to measure psychosocial determinants of HCPs’ vaccine confidence and their associations with vaccination behaviors in European countries. Research design and methods After the original French-language Pro-VC-Be was culturally adapted and translated, HCPs involved in vaccination (mainly GPs and pediatricians) across Germany, Finland, France, and Portugal completed a cross-sectional online survey in 2022. A 10-factor multigroup confirmatory factor analysis (MG-CFA) of the long-form (10 factors comprising 34 items) tested for measurement invariance across countries. Modified multiple Poisson regressions tested the criterion validity of both versions. Results 2,748 HCPs participated. The 10-factor structure fit was acceptable to good everywhere. The final MG-CFA model confirmed strong factorial invariance and showed very good fit. The long- and short-form I-Pro-VC-Be had good criterion validity with vaccination behaviors. Conclusion This study validates the I-Pro-VC-Be among HCPs in four European countries; including long- and short-form tools for use in research and public health.

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