Women and children first: the importance of pertussis and influenza vaccination in pregnant women and how to increase vaccine uptake
Women and children first: the importance of pertussis and influenza vaccination in pregnant women and how to increase vaccine uptake
Vaccination during pregnancy has been proven effective in protecting both pregnant women and their newborns from infectious diseases. An increasing number of countries have issued recommendations for the use of pertussis and influenza vaccines during pregnancy and are offering these vaccines free of charge. However, even in such countries, despite the demonstrated effectiveness and strong safety profile of maternal pertussis and influenza vaccination, vaccine uptake has remained suboptimal. This paper gives a succinct overview of the available evidence supporting maternal pertussis and influenza vaccination, summarizes the factors that can influence vaccine uptake during pregnancy and provides practical advice on how healthcare providers in an obstetrics setting can contribute to the successful implementation of maternal immunization programs. To help increase uptake, practitioners should recommend maternal pertussis and influenza vaccination to their patients during the first antenatal visit. They should give information about the effectiveness and safety of maternal immunization, and about the risk of infection and severity of the respective diseases in the absence of vaccination. Ideally, vaccines should be offered on-site during one of the routine antenatal visits, thereby maximizing convenience for the patient. Strategies to increase uptake will need to be tailored to the antenatal care model of the specific country but, regardless of the model, should aim to incorporate vaccination into standard antenatal care. To do so, healthcare professionals involved in the delivery of vaccines should be clearly identified and adequately trained, standing orders could be instituted (allowing midwives and obstetric nurses to administer vaccines), reminders about vaccination could be added to the patient’s medical records and the patient’s vaccination status should be well documented. These measures could help establish maternal immunization as the norm in the general population and increase acceptance and uptake.
2-12
Mukherjee, Piyali
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Mihalyi, Attila
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Ralph, Kate
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Beigi, Richard H.
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Genazzani, Andrea
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Jones, Christine E
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
1 March 2021
Mukherjee, Piyali
0071c0c2-c397-4a4b-af1b-dfcd70b20a4e
Mihalyi, Attila
18d387e1-92a2-4a95-83d7-037049514532
Ralph, Kate
966c2169-bad3-435f-9999-69ac677341f9
Beigi, Richard H.
ec7f8fb6-ad60-433a-ac52-2bcc092a3523
Genazzani, Andrea
64bbbb7a-17e8-48ec-81e2-e5b60517cf4e
Jones, Christine E
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Mukherjee, Piyali, Mihalyi, Attila, Ralph, Kate, Beigi, Richard H., Genazzani, Andrea and Jones, Christine E
(2021)
Women and children first: the importance of pertussis and influenza vaccination in pregnant women and how to increase vaccine uptake.
European Gynecology and Obstetrics, 3 (1), .
Abstract
Vaccination during pregnancy has been proven effective in protecting both pregnant women and their newborns from infectious diseases. An increasing number of countries have issued recommendations for the use of pertussis and influenza vaccines during pregnancy and are offering these vaccines free of charge. However, even in such countries, despite the demonstrated effectiveness and strong safety profile of maternal pertussis and influenza vaccination, vaccine uptake has remained suboptimal. This paper gives a succinct overview of the available evidence supporting maternal pertussis and influenza vaccination, summarizes the factors that can influence vaccine uptake during pregnancy and provides practical advice on how healthcare providers in an obstetrics setting can contribute to the successful implementation of maternal immunization programs. To help increase uptake, practitioners should recommend maternal pertussis and influenza vaccination to their patients during the first antenatal visit. They should give information about the effectiveness and safety of maternal immunization, and about the risk of infection and severity of the respective diseases in the absence of vaccination. Ideally, vaccines should be offered on-site during one of the routine antenatal visits, thereby maximizing convenience for the patient. Strategies to increase uptake will need to be tailored to the antenatal care model of the specific country but, regardless of the model, should aim to incorporate vaccination into standard antenatal care. To do so, healthcare professionals involved in the delivery of vaccines should be clearly identified and adequately trained, standing orders could be instituted (allowing midwives and obstetric nurses to administer vaccines), reminders about vaccination could be added to the patient’s medical records and the patient’s vaccination status should be well documented. These measures could help establish maternal immunization as the norm in the general population and increase acceptance and uptake.
Text
EGO-D-20-00036_R1 copy
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 February 2021
Published date: 1 March 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 446853
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/446853
PURE UUID: 298badc8-1dc1-411e-85a4-9ecb71fc5043
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Date deposited: 24 Feb 2021 17:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:18
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Contributors
Author:
Piyali Mukherjee
Author:
Attila Mihalyi
Author:
Kate Ralph
Author:
Richard H. Beigi
Author:
Andrea Genazzani
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