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Canadians indifferent to getting a pandemic flu shot, poll suggests



Published on September 2, 2009
Published on September 9, 2009
The Canadian Press ~ The News  RSS Feed
Topics :
Canadian Press Harris-Decima , Ottawa Health Research Institute , Statistics Canada , TORONTO , Canada

TORONTO -

Canadians aren't clamouring en masse for swine flu vaccine, a new poll suggests.
The Canadian Press Harris-Decima poll also indicates some parents have concerns about allowing their children to have a vaccine that contains an adjuvant, a compound that boosts the impact of the vaccine and allows smaller doses to be used.
Only about 45 per cent of respondents intend to get pandemic vaccine when the shots become available later in the fall, the poll found. An equal percentage said they would not take the pandemic shot.
"I think the data shows that there is an ambivalence in Canadians about the vaccine," said Dr. Kumanan Wilson, a scientist at the Ottawa Health Research Institute who has done a lot of research on the anti-vaccination movement.
"I think that public health officials need to be concerned about that. Simply having the vaccine isn't going to be enough to have a successful program."
Dr. David Butler-Jones, Canada's chief public health officer, could not be reached immediately for comment Tuesday on the survey.
The findings are based on telephone interviews conducted between Aug. 20 and Aug. 23. Just over 1,000 Canadians were surveyed, giving the poll a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
The figure showing how many Canadians plan to get the pandemic vaccine is higher than for the seasonal flu shot. Last year, for instance, just under a third of Canadians were vaccinated against seasonal flu, according to Statistics Canada.
But it's lower than the 60 per cent that the Public Health Agency of Canada estimated would want vaccine based on polling it did earlier in the outbreak.
With seasonal flu vaccine, uptake is highest among seniors and lowest among healthy adults. And the poll showed a similar breakdown when it came to the intentions of various age groups, with 56 per cent of adults 18-34 saying they don't intend to get the shot or shots. (The pandemic vaccine may require two doses to protect.)

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