AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how pediatricians utilize standing orders to improve childhood vaccination rates and identified barriers to their use.
  • About 59% of surveyed pediatricians reported using standing orders, with major concerns including the risk of administering the wrong vaccine and the desire for physician-patient discussion prior to vaccination.
  • Interventions aiming to enhance the adoption of standing orders should focus on changing pediatricians' attitudes and addressing organizational issues that hinder their implementation.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Standing orders are an effective way to increase vaccination rates, yet little is known about how pediatricians use this strategy for childhood immunizations. We assessed current use of, barriers to using, and factors associated with use of standing orders for vaccination among pediatricians.

Methods: Internet and mail survey from June 2017 to September 2017 among a nationally representative sample of pediatricians. In the principal component analysis of barrier items, we identified 2 factors: physician responsibility and concerns about office processes. A multivariable analysis that included barrier scales and physician and/or practice characteristics was used to identify factors associated with use of standing orders.

Results: The response rate was 79% (372 of 471); 59% of respondents reported using standing orders. The most commonly identified barriers among nonusers were concern that patients may mistakenly receive the wrong vaccine (68%), concern that patients prefer to speak with the physician about a vaccine before receiving it (62%), and belief that it is important for the physician to be the person who recommends a vaccine to patients (57%). These 3 items also made up the physician responsibility barrier factor. Respondents with higher physician responsibility scores were less likely to use standing orders (risk ratio: 0.59 [95% confidence interval: 0.53-0.66] per point increase). System-level decision-making about vaccines, suburban or rural location, and lower concerns about office processes scores were each associated with use of standing orders in the bivariate, but not the multivariable, analysis.

Conclusions: Among pediatricians, use of standing orders for vaccination is far from universal. Interventions to increase use of standing orders should address physicians' attitudinal barriers as well as organizational factors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9955536PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2019-1855DOI Listing

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