Recent outbreaks of measles – the highest number in the EU for seven
years – are a sign of the immediate impact of declining vaccine
coverage, the report said, and should prompt governments to act to
boost vaccine awareness and confidence.
The report, published by the European Commission and compiled by a
team of scientists led by Heidi Larson, a professor and director of
the Vaccine Confidence Project at the London School of Hygiene &
Tropical Medicine, found differing trends in vaccine confidence
across EU member states.
Some – including France, Greece, Italy and Slovenia – have become
more confident in vaccine safety since 2015, while others, such as
Czech Republic, Finland, Poland and Sweden, have become less
confident.
The EU's health commissioner Vytenis Andriukaitis said the report's
findings showed "the need for EU action".
He noted that Europe has lower confidence in the safety of vaccines
than other regions of the world, and that seven out of the 10
countries with the lowest vaccine confidence in the world are in
Europe - France, Greece, Italy and Slovenia.
"This is partly due to the rising influence of diverse anti-vaccine
groups that spread misleading information through the internet or in
political fora," he said. "Their influence should make us all
cautious."
The report found that vaccine trust among medics is linked to
confidence among members of the public, and that while family
doctors generally have higher levels of confidence, there are
worrying signs of mistrust even in the medical community.
Some 36 percent of family doctors surveyed in Czech Republic and 25
percent in Slovakia do not agree that the measles, mumps and rubella
(MMR) vaccine is safe, and 29 percent and 19 percent respectively do
not believe it is important, the survey showed.
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The report found that since 2010, coverage of measles immunization -
defined as a first dose of a measles-containing vaccine such as MMR
- has fallen in 12 EU countries: Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic,
Estonia, Finland, Greece, Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland, Romania,
Slovakia and Slovenia.
Vaccine confidence was defined in the report as trust in the
effectiveness and safety of vaccines and in the healthcare system
that delivers them.
Confidence in, and demand for, vaccines is influenced by a number of
factors, including the importance, safety, and effectiveness of the
shots. Larson said monitoring that confidence over time can be an
important barometer of emerging issues that countries may need to
act on.
Larson noted that across the EU, confidence in flu vaccines is lower
than trust in the MMR shot.
This is "perhaps in part due to the efficacy of the flu vaccine
changing year to year" she said, but also because "there is a low
perception of the various serious risks of influenza".
Another concerning trend, Larson said, was increasing hesitancy
among doctors to recommend flu vaccines to pregnant women: "This is
worrying as the group is considered very high risk for serious
complications when it comes to flu."
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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