Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey

Aim:Since the discovery of vaccines, opposing views have emerged and spread to the present day. Despite being based on different beliefs in different societies, anti-vaccination has become a rapidly growing social movement worldwide. Resistance to vaccination was included among health hazards at a g...

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Main Authors: Mehtap Ataseven Bulun, Deniz Acuner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Galenos Yayinevi 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Pediatric Research
Subjects:
Online Access: http://jpedres.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/turkish-adaptation-and-reliability-and-validity-st/39804
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spelling doaj-5eaf041de4d5423fa6a5cd2ae0f1c0b32020-11-25T03:59:49ZengGalenos YayineviJournal of Pediatric Research2147-94452587-24782020-12-017432333010.4274/jpr.galenos.2020.9226013049054Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines SurveyMehtap Ataseven Bulun0Deniz Acuner1 İstanbul Okan University, Vocational School of Health Services, İstanbul, Turkey Üsküdar University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Health Management, İstanbul, Turkey Aim:Since the discovery of vaccines, opposing views have emerged and spread to the present day. Despite being based on different beliefs in different societies, anti-vaccination has become a rapidly growing social movement worldwide. Resistance to vaccination was included among health hazards at a global level by the World Health Organization in 2019. In a review of the literature, some studies conducted on vaccine rejection, vaccine hesitations and vaccine acceptance were found in different countries, but no studies in which vaccine hesitation was examined had been conducted in Turkey. The main reason was considered to be the lack of a vaccine attitude scale adapted into the Turkish language. The aim of this study was to carry out a vaccination attitudes scale validity and reliability test on a scale which had been proven in foreign empirical studies and been translated into the Turkish language and to publish the scale in the field literature to be used in future vaccination attitudes studies in Turkey.Materials and Methods:This study is a methodological study. The Parent Attitudes about Childhood Vaccines (PACV) scale was translated into Turkish by three experts who were competent in both English and Turkish, then it was translated back into English again. As a result of the comparison made, several changes were made to the Turkish scale. A pilot application was used and its results were evaluated. Confirming the results of the pilot application, the scale was applied to 225 parents. The reliability of the analyzed data was tested via Cronbach’s alpha.Results:The reliability of the data was determined to be 0.84, and the scale was considered reliable. Confirmatory factor analysis for the adapted scale was carried out, and the adaptation of the scale into Turkish was completed.Conclusion:The Turkish version of the PACV scale is a valid and reliable scale for evaluating vaccine attitudes including vaccine rejection, vaccine hesitations and vaccine acceptance. http://jpedres.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/turkish-adaptation-and-reliability-and-validity-st/39804 anti-vaccination movementvaccination refusalreliability and validityquestionnaires
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mehtap Ataseven Bulun
Deniz Acuner
spellingShingle Mehtap Ataseven Bulun
Deniz Acuner
Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey
Journal of Pediatric Research
anti-vaccination movement
vaccination refusal
reliability and validity
questionnaires
author_facet Mehtap Ataseven Bulun
Deniz Acuner
author_sort Mehtap Ataseven Bulun
title Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey
title_short Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey
title_full Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey
title_fullStr Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey
title_full_unstemmed Turkish Adaptation and Reliability and Validity Study of Parent Attitudes About Childhood Vaccines Survey
title_sort turkish adaptation and reliability and validity study of parent attitudes about childhood vaccines survey
publisher Galenos Yayinevi
series Journal of Pediatric Research
issn 2147-9445
2587-2478
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Aim:Since the discovery of vaccines, opposing views have emerged and spread to the present day. Despite being based on different beliefs in different societies, anti-vaccination has become a rapidly growing social movement worldwide. Resistance to vaccination was included among health hazards at a global level by the World Health Organization in 2019. In a review of the literature, some studies conducted on vaccine rejection, vaccine hesitations and vaccine acceptance were found in different countries, but no studies in which vaccine hesitation was examined had been conducted in Turkey. The main reason was considered to be the lack of a vaccine attitude scale adapted into the Turkish language. The aim of this study was to carry out a vaccination attitudes scale validity and reliability test on a scale which had been proven in foreign empirical studies and been translated into the Turkish language and to publish the scale in the field literature to be used in future vaccination attitudes studies in Turkey.Materials and Methods:This study is a methodological study. The Parent Attitudes about Childhood Vaccines (PACV) scale was translated into Turkish by three experts who were competent in both English and Turkish, then it was translated back into English again. As a result of the comparison made, several changes were made to the Turkish scale. A pilot application was used and its results were evaluated. Confirming the results of the pilot application, the scale was applied to 225 parents. The reliability of the analyzed data was tested via Cronbach’s alpha.Results:The reliability of the data was determined to be 0.84, and the scale was considered reliable. Confirmatory factor analysis for the adapted scale was carried out, and the adaptation of the scale into Turkish was completed.Conclusion:The Turkish version of the PACV scale is a valid and reliable scale for evaluating vaccine attitudes including vaccine rejection, vaccine hesitations and vaccine acceptance.
topic anti-vaccination movement
vaccination refusal
reliability and validity
questionnaires
url http://jpedres.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/turkish-adaptation-and-reliability-and-validity-st/39804
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