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UnknownNCT03804489

Using "Decision Aids" to Help the Infant Family to Decide the Use of Oral Rotavirus Vaccine

Using "Decision Aids" to Help the Infant Family to Decide Whether the Baby Will Receive the Self-paid Oral Rotavirus Vaccine: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
180 (estimated)
Sponsor
Taipei Medical University Shuang Ho Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Using decision aids (DA) is one way to provide information to infant family and to involve them in making decisions about their baby's vaccination. We developed a DA administered after consultation for baby's family deciding on whether the baby will receive the self-paid oral rotavirus vaccine

Detailed description

Background: Acute gastroenteritis is one of the most common infectious diseases and still a major cause of pediatric morbidity and mortality worldwide. Rotavirus was still the major cause of acute gastroenteritis in infants and young children worldwide, including in Taiwan. The World Health Organization has recommended rotavirus vaccine, which became available in 2006, for all countries. However, not all of children in Taiwan received rotavirus vaccination. Using decision aids (DA) is one way to provide information to infant family and to involve them in making decisions about their baby's vaccination. We developed a DA administered after consultation for baby's family deciding on whether the baby will receive the self-paid oral rotavirus vaccine Patients and Methods Decision aids are interventions designed to help infant family make choices among options by providing information relevant to oral rotavirus vaccine. Infant coming to receiving regular routine vaccination at 1 month old are randomly assigned to receive a DA or the standard oral conversation (control condition) after the initial consultation. Infant family complete interview-based questionnaires 1 month later when they came back to hospital receiving 2-month-old regular routine vaccination and decide to receive self-paid oral rotavirus vaccine or not at that time. Primary outcome measures: decisional conflict and decision-making difficulties at 2-month-old. Results and Conclusion The DA group are predicted to lower decisional conflict scores when compared with the control group. Our study hopes to support the efficacy of DA in helping the infant family to decide whether the baby will receive the self-paid oral rotavirus vaccine.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERDecision aidsDecision aids in helping the infant family to decide whether the infant will or will not receive the oral rotavirus vaccine.

Timeline

Start date
2019-01-25
Primary completion
2019-10-25
Completion
2019-12-25
First posted
2019-01-15
Last updated
2019-01-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Taiwan

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03804489. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.