Vaccine Hesitancy Among Parents in Croatia: Findings from a Nationwide PACV-Based Cross-Sectional Study
Lidija Tubikanec, Ana Marija Švigir, Martina Smrekar, Snježana Čukljek, Sanja Ledinski, Boris Ilić, Biljana Filipović

TL;DR
A study in Croatia found that many parents are hesitant about childhood vaccines, and higher education is linked to lower vaccine hesitancy.
Contribution
This study provides new insights into vaccine hesitancy patterns among Croatian parents using a validated PACV questionnaire.
Findings
Approximately 20.8% of parents refused childhood vaccines, and 15.5% remained undecided.
Higher parental education was significantly associated with lower vaccine hesitancy scores.
Most vaccine-hesitant parents were mothers aged 30–45 years.
Abstract
What are the main findings? A substantial proportion of Croatian parents demonstrate childhood vaccine hesitancy.Higher parental education was associated with lower PACV scores A substantial proportion of Croatian parents demonstrate childhood vaccine hesitancy. Higher parental education was associated with lower PACV scores What are the implications of the main findings? Addressing parental concerns through structured communication may improve vaccine confidence.Pediatricians and community health nurses play a key role in supporting informed vaccination decisions. Addressing parental concerns through structured communication may improve vaccine confidence. Pediatricians and community health nurses play a key role in supporting informed vaccination decisions. Background: Childhood vaccination remains one of the most effective public health interventions. Despite consistently high…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · Immune responses and vaccinations · Bacterial Infections and Vaccines
