The benefits of childhood vaccination are well established [
1]. Vaccine uptake rates in most industrialised countries are generally high. However, two broad parental factors are associated with under-vaccination. The first relates to socioeconomic disadvantage where, despite some motivation to have their children vaccinated, parents or carers (hereafter referred to as ‘parents’) lack access to adequate resources and support to overcome logistical barriers such as a lack of transport or childcare [
2,
3]. The second factor, and the focus of this paper, relates to parents’ concerns about the safety or necessity of vaccines [
4,
5].
A critical factor shaping parental attitudes to vaccination is the parents’ interactions with health professionals. An effective interaction can address the concerns of vaccine supportive parents and motivate a hesitant parent towards vaccine acceptance [
5,
6]. Conversely, poor communication can contribute to rejection of vaccinations or dissatisfaction with care [
7-
9]. Such poor communication often results from a belief by the health professional that vaccine refusal arises from ignorance which can simply be addressed by persuading or providing more information. Such an approach is counter-productive because it fails to account for the complexity of reasons underpinning vaccine refusal and may even result in a backfire effect [
10]. Parental vaccination decisions are based on an array of factors and parents integrate information according to their experiential and social contexts [
11,
12]. A parent’s trust in the source of information may be more important than what is in the information [
13,
14].
Health professionals have a central role in maintaining public trust in vaccination; this includes addressing parents’ vaccine concerns [
15]. These concerns will likely increase as vaccination schedules inevitably become more complex, and parents have increased access to varied information through the internet and social media [
16]. In recognition of the need to support health professionals in this challenging communication task conducted in usually short consultations, recommendations have been proposed [
17-
21]. Previously, most of these have focused on
what is said, that is, the information that should be given to parents. Few have addressed
how health professionals should engage with parents [
17-
21]. Since it is clear that parents want an improved dialogue about vaccinations [
22-
24], it is essential to focus on communication processes that build rapport and trust between the health professional and the parent [
25-
27].
We propose here a framework to guide health professionals in communicating with parents about vaccination. By focusing on both what is said and how it is said, we attempt to provide an integrated, generic approach going beyond simply the one-way provision of information.
The framework is informed by evidence from decision making and communication research and is applicable for use by all health professionals in their vaccination discussions, particularly where there might be parental reluctance to vaccinate. It focuses on recommended childhood vaccines but is also applicable to discussions with other groups recommended for vaccination. We propose categories or ‘positions’ that reflect different parental attitudes and behaviours regarding vaccination and suggest specific communication strategies tailored to each position. The overarching goal of the encounter is to promote quality decisions and, ultimately, vaccination.
Development of the framework
The framework was developed to:
a) be acceptable to health professionals
b) increase health professional and parent satisfaction with discussions about vaccination
c) increase a health professional’s self-efficacy (sense of confidence and competence) in relation to communicating about vaccination
d) increase the likelihood of the parent making a decision based on evidence (by increasing access to quality information)
e) encourage uptake of recommended vaccines.
There were four stages in developing the framework: a literature review, classifying parental positions on vaccination, matching strategies to these positions and assessing their face validity with heath professionals.
Stage 1: Literature review
This aimed to (1) identify existing research that had classified parents’ positions based on their attitudes and behaviours regarding childhood vaccination and (2) identify articles that contained strategies to communicate with parents about vaccination. We searched MEDLINE (1996–), PsycINFO (1967–), CINAHL (1982–), and EMBASE (1980–) in September 2010. The following combination of keywords and associated MESH headings (identified for each database) was used: child$ or infant$ or newborn$ or baby or babies AND vaccin$ or immunis$ or immuniz AND decision$ or choice behavio$ or choic$ or communicat$ or consult$.
The searches identified 3168 total hits (including duplicates) which was reduced to 112 after screening titles and removing duplicates. Of these, we identified three studies that proposed a spectrum spanning the parental positions on vaccination. These are described in Table [
28-
30]. We found nine papers advising health professionals on communicating with patients about vaccination but none that tailored communication to empirically derived parental positions [
17-
21,
31-
34].
| Table 1Summary of studies identifying parental positions on vaccination |
Stage 2: Identifying parental positions on vaccination
We reviewed the classifications presented within the three identified studies, [
28-
30] summarised parental positions from each study, and discussed their relevance to vaccine communication. A discrete number of parental positions relating to vaccination attitudes and behaviour were proposed, discussed and revised based on the categories’ applicability to clinical interactions and international relevance. The final set of five parental positions are described in Table . A range for the approximate proportion of each group is given based on population surveys or registers from the USA, European Union, New Zealand, and Australia [
4,
28,
35-
44].
| Table 2Parental positions on vaccination according to attitudes and behaviours |
Stage 3: Matching strategies to parental positions
For each parental position, we proposed an overall communication approach then more specific guidance tailored to each parental position (1 and ). Given that no tailored guidance was identified in the literature review, the specific strategies were informed by the literature on health communication; [
48,
49] our professional and educational experience; valid consent principles, [
50] and those of motivational interviewing which uses a guiding style to promote healthy behaviours [
51].
| Table 3Unhelpful and helpful strategies for addressing parental concerns about vaccination |
| Table 4Parental position, with the recommendations for each group |
Stage 4: Seeking feedback from health professionals
To assess general acceptability of the framework and recommendations, accredited nurse immunisation providers were presented with them in three annual update sessions, and 104 completed a short questionnaire about usefulness (scored from 1 ‘not at all useful’ to 10 ‘extremely useful’), realism (not at all/somewhat/very), strengths (open question), and areas for improvement (open question). Feedback was positive with a median score for usefulness of 8.8 (range 3–10); 74% rated the framework as ‘very realistic’, 26% as ‘somewhat realistic’, while no-one rated it as ‘not at all realistic’. General practice immunisation coordinators, immunisation experts, and a consumer representative (n

=

20) all provided verbal feedback on the draft framework. All feedback was used to inform revisions of the recommendations.
The framework
How discussions are addressed
While the majority of parents accept vaccination (Table ), attendance at the consultation should not be presumed to indicate consent. Ideally parents will receive credible information prior to their child’s appointment. Health professionals have a responsibility to ensure that parental consent for vaccination is valid. This requires more than simply giving information and is built upon a relationship and interaction [
50,
52].
Building trust is paramount in any healthcare interaction. As noted by Benin et al, the trusted health professional is one who: has spent time with the child and parent; listened to, accepted and addressed their concerns; possesses the necessary scientific information; and uses a whole-person approach that is not patronising but treats parents and their children as individuals [
29]. Table lists unhelpful and helpful approaches to communication with all parents.
Health professionals’ body language ideally indicates that the discussions are important and distractions, such as using computers while talking, are best avoided. They need to speedily establish rapport and clarify parental concerns, avoiding the temptation to minimise or dismiss these (“Oh there’s nothing to worry about, vaccination is very safe nowadays”) [
27,
53]. Instead it is important to fully understand parents’ concerns and motivations using open questions and empathic responses [
27]. Although health professionals may be reluctant to encourage questions [
27,
54], with practice, targeted questions allow health professionals to tailor their discussions [
51].
Giving information is an integral part of the immunisation encounter. Here, the skills for efficient information provision are useful - primarily ‘signposting’ and ‘chunking and checking’ (see 1 , and for examples) [
49]. Signposting is the skill of clearly indicating to the parent (or patient) the different phases of the consultation. Chunking and checking refers to the provision of information in small chunks followed by checking the person’s understanding. This technique contrasts with the common practice of providing much larger amounts of information before checking, which can lead to information overload.
| Table 5Example of dialogue with the unquestioning or cautious acceptor parent |
| Table 6Example of dialogue with the hesitant parent |
| Table 7Example of dialogue with the vaccine-refusing parent |
What to include in discussions with parents
It is important to communicate risk effectively [
56]. It is recommended that health professionals give information about common but minor side effects, and rare but serious ones [
57]. Written materials, web links, or decision aids given prior to, or used during, the consultation can be helpful [
58-
60]. In a recent UK survey 156 primary health care professionals viewed the inclusion of a web link for an online MMR decision aid contained in a parents’ MMR pre-vaccination invitation letter as an appropriate way to support parents coming to the consultation [
61]. Written resources may be available in electronic/online or paper format. These vary widely between countries and clinicians should be familiar with how to locate them.
Risk communication is best tailored to individuals. In general terms outcomes are better understood when they are specified and when their probability is given in numbers (e.g. 1 in 1000) although some may prefer words [
62]. When presenting probabilities, there remains conflicting evidence over whether natural frequencies (e.g., 1 in 100) or percentages are preferable [
63]. A recent study concluded that percentages may be better understood than natural frequencies [
64]. To avoid confusion, a consistent denominator should be used when presenting event rates for comparison [
65]. Visual representations of probability have also been recommended and are commonly used in decision aids [
59,
61].
Specific information is most helpful when it is timely, consistent, relevant, up to date, and, where available, local. Parents should also be advised about how to manage the common side effects of vaccinations and how to seek help if they have further concerns [
66].
A tailored approach
Evidence from other areas of healthcare practice suggests adapting the principles of motivational interviewing. This is a form of communication that uses a guiding style, rather than a directing style, for discussions where there is ambivalence and resistance to change [
51]. Motivational interviewing involves asking questions that clarify an individual’s responsiveness to change and elicits their own motivations for change. The method has demonstrated effectiveness in a range of health behaviours [
67]. In this particular context, the ambivalence and resistance to change relates to whether or not a parent should have their child vaccinated rather than focusing on a behaviour such as quitting smoking.
It should also be borne in mind that motivational interviewing builds upon the Transtheoretical Model [
68]. This is a framework for understanding the process of behaviour change where individuals may pass through five stages:
precontemplation, where they are not considering change;
contemplation, where they seriously consider change;
preparation, where they plan and commit to change;
action, where they make a specific behavioural change which if successful, leads to
maintenance of that behaviour, the fifth stage.
Accordingly, Table strategies tailored to the parent’s stage. The majority of parents are in the
action and
maintenance stage (cautious or unquestioning acceptors). Some will be
contemplating or even
preparing to immunise – what we describe as ‘hesitant’ parents. Late or selective vaccinators, who are willing to have some vaccines, may also
contemplate full vaccination if guided by a health professional [
5]. ‘Vaccine refusers’ are usually in the
pre-contemplation stage where they are not considering vaccinating at all. It is unrealistic to expect such parents to move to the
action stage at one visit. However, the goal may be to guide them toward
contemplating vaccination. This would be done by asking permission to discuss; encouraging them to explore the pros and cons of their decision; and eliciting their own possible motivations to change (Table ).
Tables , and give examples of suggested dialogue for unquestioning and cautious acceptors, hesitant, and refusing parents. For late or selective vaccinators, strategies can apply from those suggested for hesitant and refusing parents. A parent’s starting position can be clarified with initial questions (How do you feel about the vaccinations?) and observation of their body language.
It may also be possible to flag specific questions or concerns for discussion prior to the consultation. For example, a question prompt sheet for parents to use in consultations about MMR vaccination was positively evaluated by 46 parents in a UK study [
69]. Specifically parents reported that the prompt sheet enabled them to feel confident in ‘raising the issue of MMR’ with their GP or nurse.
The goals for the consultation will vary according to the parent’s position. Health professionals should avoid a mismatch between the parent’s expectations and needs and their own assumptions. For example, a ‘hesitant’ father may be planning only to obtain information but feels he is being pressured to vaccinate. The cost may be loss of his trust and a subsequent unwillingness to return. Similarly, a ‘refusing’ mother might be approached by a health professional who is intent on changing her mind [
70]. This ‘righting reflex’ is the natural response of health professionals to instinctively ‘put right’ healthcare problems rather than finding out patients’ concerns or points of view. It may lead to an adversarial position and further entrench the parent’s views, closing the door to any future possible gains [
71]. In this situation, a better goal would be to build a rapport that may lead to willingness for further discussion or partial vaccination. Vaccine-refusing parents may be willing to consider an alternative schedule and may be willing to hear how to recognise and respond early to signs that their child may have a vaccine-preventable disease (Table ).