# Supporting Informed Vaccine Decision-Making and Communication in Pregnancy Through the Vaccines in Pregnancy Canada Intervention: Multimethod Co-Design Study

**Authors:** Eliana Castillo, Andrea M Patey, Medea Myers-Stewart, Monica Santosh Surti, Maria Castrellon Pardo, Marcia Bruce, Zaileen Jamal, Madison Kennedy, Julie A Bettinger, Jessica Kaufman, Margie Danchin, Maoliosa Donald

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/77446 · Journal of Medical Internet Research · 2025-12-16

## TL;DR

This study co-designed an intervention to improve vaccine communication and decision-making in pregnancy by involving patients and healthcare providers.

## Contribution

The study introduces VIP Canada, a co-designed, multicomponent intervention to address vaccine communication barriers in pregnancy.

## Key findings

- The VIP Canada intervention includes a communication approach, skills course, practice change plan, and a website for patients and providers.
- Healthcare providers found the skills course clear and practical, leading to improvements in audio-visual features and downloadable materials.
- Patients found the VIP Canada website visually appealing and supportive of informed decision-making after iterative refinements.

## Abstract

Vaccination in pregnancy (VIP) protects pregnant individuals and their newborns; yet, uptake remains suboptimal. Pregnant individuals face unique decision-making challenges, and communication with their health care provider (HCP) is crucial for uptake. While there is extensive data on barriers to VIP, interventions applying evidence-based behavior change strategies and co-designed with end users are scarce. Our prior work indicated that a new Canadian intervention was needed.

This study aimed to co-design a multicomponent intervention to support informed decision-making and vaccine communication in pregnancy.

Our multimethod study followed the Double Diamond phases (ie, Discover, Define, Develop, and Deliver) and partnered with a diverse patient advisory council and a multidisciplinary team of HCPs. During the Discover and Define phases, our previous work, we explored gaps and barriers to VIP in Canada and defined the behavior change strategies to address those needs. During the Develop phase, we co-designed and conducted iterative prototyping of four intervention components: (1) a pregnancy-specific communication approach, (2) a skills course for HCPs, (3) a practice change plan, and (4) a website with evidence-based resources for patients and HCPs. We used online and in-person participatory co-design sessions and peer-to-peer, patient-oriented online focus groups and semistructured in-depth interviews. During the Deliver phase, we refined the intervention components through functionality and usability testing.

The Vaccines in Pregnancy Canada (VIP Canada) intervention consists of four integrated components: (1) DECIDE (Determine, Elicit, Consent, Interactive discussion, Deliver, and Empower): a patient-centered, pregnancy-specific communication approach for providers to deliver a clear vaccine recommendation while respecting autonomy. (2) Skills course for HCPs: 4 self-paced, online modules to learn the rationale for VIP and the DECIDE communication approach and 2 group sessions. Providers found the skills course clear, practical, and applicable across diverse clinical roles and settings. Feedback led to enhancements, including improved audio-visual synchronization, consistent closed captioning, and the addition of downloadable reference materials to support learning. (3) Practice change plan: an action plan HCPs make to integrate vaccine communication into their practice. (4) VIP Canada website: an evidence-based website with resources to support informed vaccine decision-making for patients and providers. Patient feedback informed iterative refinements to the layout and content of the website to enhance navigation, readability, and representation of diverse identities. Functionality and usability testing demonstrated that patients found the VIP Canada website visually appealing, easy to navigate, and supportive of informed decision-making.

The VIP Canada is a promising intervention co-designed to drive behavior change by addressing key barriers to vaccine communication and informed decision-making around our patient partners’ and HCPs’ perspectives and lived experiences to bridge theoretical frameworks with real-world relevance. Next steps include a feasibility study for further refinement and a subsequent effectiveness study.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

59 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12754583/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12754583