Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Dec 2024)

Vaccine hesitancy educational interventions for medical students: A systematic narrative review in western countries

  • Philip White,
  • Hugh Alberti,
  • Gill Rowlands,
  • Eugene Tang,
  • Dominique Gagnon,
  • Ève Dubé

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2024.2397875
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1

Abstract

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Physician recommendations can reduce vaccine hesitancy (VH) and improve uptake yet are often done poorly and can be improved by early-career training. We examined educational interventions for medical students in Western countries to explore what is being taught, identify effective elements, and review the quality of evidence. A mixed methods systematic narrative review, guided by the JBI framework, assessed the study quality using MERSQI and Cote & Turgeon frameworks. Data were extracted to analyze content and framing, with effectiveness graded using value-based judgment. Among the 33 studies with 30 unique interventions, effective studies used multiple methods grounded in educational theory to teach knowledge, skills, and attitudes. Most interventions reinforced a deficit-based approach (assuming VH stems from misinformation) which can be counterproductive. Effective interventions used hands-on, interactive methods emulating real practice, with short- and long-term follow-ups. Evidence-based approaches like motivational interviewing should frame interventions instead of the deficit model.

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