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Academic literature on the topic 'Hésitation vaccinale'
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Journal articles on the topic "Hésitation vaccinale"
Vonnez, Jean-Luc. "Hésitation vaccinale : accueillir la part tendre." Revue Médicale Suisse 17, no. 758 (2021): 1954. http://dx.doi.org/10.53738/revmed.2021.17.758.1954.
Full textVelut, G. "Hésitation vaccinale et conduite à risque en santé." Revue d'Épidémiologie et de Santé Publique 63, no. 3 (June 2015): 217–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.respe.2015.04.011.
Full textDib, Fadia, Gwenn Menvielle, and Pierre Chauvin. "Tous égaux face aux papillomavirus ? L’infection et la vaccination HPV au prisme des inégalités sociales de santé." Questions de santé publique, no. 38 (November 2019): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/qsp/2019038.
Full textBEGUE, Pierre. "Vaccination Hesitation and Vaccination Challenges in 2017." International Journal of Medicine and Surgery 4, s (2017): 78–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.15342/ijms.v4is.147.
Full textDalmat, Yann-Mickael. "Hésitation vaccinale ? AHF lance la campagne : « As-tu fais ta part ? »." Option/Bio 32, no. 631-632 (April 2021): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0992-5945(21)00066-0.
Full textLuyt, Domitille, Thomas Cardot, Sylvain Gautier, Marie Herr, Anne Rousseau, Benjamin Davido, Elisabeth Delarocque-Astagneau, and Loïc Josseran. "Hésitation vaccinale à la COVID-19 : une étude chez les étudiants en santé." Santé Publique Vol. 34, HS1 (July 11, 2022): 22d. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/spub.220.0022d.
Full textMiane, B., J. J. Grob, M. A. Richard, C. Gaudy, S. Monestier, S. Hesse, M. Garcia, et al. "Hésitation vaccinale et corticophobie dans la dermatite atopique de l’enfant : étude observationnelle unicentrique." Annales de Dermatologie et de Vénéréologie 147, no. 12 (December 2020): A103—A104. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annder.2020.09.059.
Full textFaye, Abdou Karim. "Comportement de Consommation Santé (CCS) en contexte africain. Apports théoriques et implications marketing d’un modèle intégrateur appliqué à la vaccination contre la Covid-19." La Revue des Sciences de Gestion N° 324, no. 5 (February 22, 2024): 67–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rsg.324.0067.
Full textGOCKO, X. "LA TRIBU EXERCER." EXERCER 35, no. 205 (September 1, 2024): 291. http://dx.doi.org/10.56746/exercer.2024.205.291.
Full textCORNUZ, J., and X. GOCKO. "LA PREMIERE LIGNE FRANCOPHONE ET LA CRISE DE LA COVID-19." EXERCER 34, no. 189 (January 1, 2023): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.56746/exercer.2023.189.3.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Hésitation vaccinale"
Araujo, Chaveron Lucia. "Preferences and antecedents of vaccine decision among healthcare professionals and the adult population in France." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024SORUS220.
Full textThe literature on vaccine hesitancy largely reports the importance of the perception of the benefit-risk balance (BRB) in vaccine acceptance. The COVID-19 pandemic and the unprecedented vaccination policies implemented by the French government during a novel vaccine campaign provided an opportunity to assess the impact of COVID-19 certificate or vaccine mandate on future COVID-19 vaccine intention considering the perceived BRB of COVID-19 vaccination, evaluate the 7C-psychological antecedents of vaccination across the novel COVID-19 vaccine campaign, explore preferences around the concept of BRB among the general adult population and among healthcare sector-workers (HCSWs), define and characterize individuals who constantly refused vaccination regardless of BRB attributes. Four different studies were conducted during this thesis, a) a cross-sectional study to explore the impact of the COVID-19 certificate-mandate and perceived vaccination BRB on future vaccine intention among the general population, b) a repeated cross-sectional survey among HCSWs to monitor their psychological antecedents of vaccine acceptance at different stages of the COVID-19 vaccination campaign, c) a discrete choice experiment (DCE) to investigate the vaccination BRB preferences of the general public and HCSWs and d) a vaccine eagerness scale integrated into the previous DCE to define different vaccination behavior profiles around the concept of vaccine BRB. Our findings suggest that the COVID-19 certificate enactment did not effectively persuade elderly people, who would have been those with the greatest potential benefit from vaccination, but that ceding to the strong incentive/mandate was not associated with reduced, but rather increased intention for future COVID-19 vaccination. Among HCSWs, the decision to accept vaccination under the mandate depended solely on the perception of vaccination as a collective action, but not on the vaccination perception of benefits vs. risks. However, as the pandemic and vaccine booster recommendations evolved and as HCSWs gained more experience with the COVID-19 vaccine, they resumed considering vaccine BRB in their vaccine decisions. Our preference study suggested that both the general public and non-university-level HCSWs do not consider the numerical aspect of benefits vs. risks in hypothetical vaccine scenarios, they rather consider qualitative attributes surrounding the BRB concept such as disease frequency and severity, and indirect protection effects. By contrast, we estimated that hypothetical vaccine uptake among university-level HCSWs significantly increases by 40% when vaccination benefit-risk ratio moves from 10:1 to 100:1. Finally, we found that compared to respondents who accepted some but not all scenarios of the single profile DCE, those accepting all scenarios were more likely to have a positive perception the BRB and be motivated by employer's or authorities' incitation to get vaccinated, while those refusing all scenarios were more likely to have low confidence in authorities to manage the epidemic, low confidence in vaccine safety, not perceive vaccine as collective action to stop the epidemic and show reactance to employer's or authorities' incitation to get vaccinated. The research suggests that vaccine campaigns targeting vaccine-reluctant individuals should focus on improving confidence in authorities and confidence in the vaccine (vaccine safety). Additionally, vaccination campaigns should provide information about vaccination as a collective action, emphasizing its indirect protection benefits and the risks of developing the disease
Eisenhauer, Catherine. "Applications of digital epidemiology in the study of behavior, opinion, and infectious disease dynamics." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Paris Cité, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021UNIP5159.
Full textThe age of the internet has changed the world before our eyes. It has profoundly impacted the way we interact with information, form relationships, and make decisions. This shift has important and potentially dangerous ramifications for public health, particularly in the context of online misinformation. But it has also given rise to new opportunities through the unprecedented availability of new ecosystems of data and novel methods of data collection. Digital epidemiology is a relatively new branch of public health that seeks to leverage these new sources of information to investigate health related questions. First characterized in the mid 1990s, this nascent field has grown exponentially in the past ten years as new datasets and computational tools have become increasingly accessible. The goal of this thesis is to explore applications of digital epidemiology in the study of opinion, behavior, and infectious disease dynamics. It is structured into three primary sections. In the first, we review tools used in digital epidemiology and their limitations. Taking vaccine hesitancy on Twitter as a case study, we then evaluate methods used in the field of computational social science and discuss how they could be beneficially applied in the context of public health. The second section dives deeper into Twitter and explores the dynamics of resource sharing behavior in vaccine discussions. Here, we find that unreliable resources dominate vaccine hesitant discourse in both prevalence and virality. Moreover, we identify three online domains, Natural News, News Target, and YouTube, that account for nearly half of all resources shared among hesitant communities. In the third section we analyse data from a citizen science survey conducted during the early stages of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in France. These analyses describe patterns in behavior and attitude during and after a national lockdown. Associations between the adherence to recommended protective behaviors and factors related to demography, psychology, and perception are explored. Finally, we reflect on possible strategies to combat health misinformation, ethical challenges in digital epidemiology, and the viability of digital epidemiology in broader public health contexts
Books on the topic "Hésitation vaccinale"
Reconnaître les controverses de l'hésitation vaccinale. EDP Sciences, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/978-2-7598-2766-4.
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