Provider Confidence in Counseling Preconception, Pregnant, and Postpartum Patients Regarding COVID-19 Vaccination

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Abstract

Objective

To assess knowledge and confidence in COVID-19 vaccine counseling among practitioners who provide care to pregnant persons and to describe factors associated with confidence in counseling.

Study Design

A web-based anonymous survey was distributed via email to a cross-sectional convenience sample of OB/GYN, Primary Care, and Internal Medicine faculty at three hospitals in a single healthcare network in Massachusetts. Individual demographics and institution-specific variables were included in the survey along with questions assessing both attitudes toward COVID-19 illness in pregnancy as well as confidence in counseling regarding the use of the vaccine for pregnant patients.

Results

Almost all providers (151, 98.1%) reported already receiving or being scheduled to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, and a majority of providers (111, 72.1%) reported that they believe the benefits of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine in pregnancy outweigh the risks. Forty-one (26.6%) reported feeling very confident in counseling patients who primarily speak English about the evidence for mRNA vaccination in pregnancy, and 36 (23%) reported feeling very confident in counseling patients who are not primarily English-speaking. Forty-three providers (28.1%) expressed strong confidence in their comfort talking to individuals with vaccine hesitancy based on historic and continued racism and systemic injustices. The sources that survey respondents most commonly used to find information regarding COVID-19 vaccination in pregnancy were the CDC (112, 74.2%), hospital-specific resources (94, 62.3%) and ACOG (82, 54.3%).

Conclusion

While providers reported high personal uptake of COVID-19 vaccination and felt that the benefits of vaccination outweigh the risks in pregnancy, less than one-third felt very confident in counseling pregnant patients about available evidence for mRNA vaccine safety in pregnancy. Ensuring that providers feel comfortable bridging the gap between their belief that the vaccine is beneficial for pregnant patients and their comfort with holding conversations with patients regarding vaccination is paramount in order to ensure equitable access to vaccines for pregnant patients.

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