Socio-economic inequalities in the use of flu vaccination in Europe: a multilevel approach.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-07-31 DOI:10.1186/s13561-024-00535-1
Dănuț-Vasile Jemna, Mihaela David, Liliane Bonnal, Cornel Oros
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Abstract

Background: The European-wide statistics show that the use of flu vaccination remains low and the differences between countries are significant, as are those between different population groups within each country. Considerable research has focused on explaining vaccination uptake in relation to socio-economic and demographic characteristics, health promotion and health behavior factors. Nevertheless, few studies have aimed to analyze between-country differences in the use of flu vaccination for the EU population. To address this gap, this study examines the socio-economic inequalities in the use of influenza vaccination for the population aged 15 years and over in all 27 EU Member States and two other non-EU countries (Iceland and Norway).

Methods: Using data from the third wave of European Health Interview Survey (EHIS) 2019, we employed a multilevel logistic model with a random intercept for country, which allows controlling simultaneously the variations in individuals' characteristics and macro-contextual factors which could influence the use of flu vaccination. In addition, the analysis considers the population stratified into four age groups, namely adolescents, young adults, adults and elderly, to better capture heterogeneities in flu vaccination uptake.

Results: The main findings confirm the existence of socio-economic inequalities between individuals in different age groups, but also of significant variation between European countries, particularly for older people, in the use of influenza vaccination. In this respect, income and education are strong proxy of socio-economic status associated with flu vaccination uptake. Moreover, these disparities within each population group are also explained by area of residence and occupational status. Particularly for the elderly, the differences between individuals in vaccine utilization are also explained by country-level factors, such as the type of healthcare system adopted in each country, public funding, personal health expenditure burden, or the availability of generalist practitioners.

Conclusions: Overall, our findings reveal that vaccination against seasonal influenza remains a critical public health intervention and bring attention to the relevance of conceiving and implementing context-specific strategies to ensure equitable access to vaccines for all EU citizens.

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欧洲流感疫苗接种中的社会经济不平等现象:一种多层次方法。
背景:全欧洲的统计数据显示,流感疫苗的接种率仍然很低,各国之间的差异很大,各国不同人群之间的差异也很大。大量研究集中于解释与社会经济和人口特征、健康促进和健康行为因素相关的疫苗接种率。然而,很少有研究旨在分析欧盟人口在接种流感疫苗方面的国家间差异。为了填补这一空白,本研究调查了欧盟所有 27 个成员国和另外两个非欧盟国家(冰岛和挪威)15 岁及以上人口在接种流感疫苗方面存在的社会经济不平等现象:我们使用了2019年第三波欧洲健康访谈调查(EHIS)的数据,采用了一个多层级逻辑模型,其中国家为随机截距,该模型可以同时控制个人特征的变化和可能影响流感疫苗接种的宏观背景因素。此外,分析还将人口分为四个年龄组,即青少年、青壮年、成年人和老年人,以更好地捕捉流感疫苗接种率的异质性:主要研究结果证实,不同年龄组的个人之间存在社会经济不平等,而且欧洲国家之间在流感疫苗接种方面也存在显著差异,尤其是老年人。在这方面,收入和教育程度是与流感疫苗接种率相关的社会经济地位的有力代表。此外,居住地区和职业状况也能解释每个人群中的这些差异。特别是对于老年人来说,疫苗接种率的个体差异还可以用国家层面的因素来解释,如每个国家采用的医疗保健系统类型、公共资金、个人医疗支出负担或全科医生的可用性等:总之,我们的研究结果表明,接种季节性流感疫苗仍然是一项重要的公共卫生干预措施,并提请人们注意制定和实施因地制宜的战略的重要性,以确保所有欧盟公民都能公平地接种疫苗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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