Motives for non-vaccination: critical review of the international literature, 1950-1990

Authors

  • Gustavo Nigenda-López Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública
  • Emanuel Orozco Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública
  • René Leyva Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0034-89101997000300015

Keywords:

Immunization programs, organization, Consumer participation

Abstract

Many countries have acknowledged that vaccination programs call for a mastery of technical and organizational elements if they are to become accesible to the population. One of these elements has been greatly understimated: the participation of populations and their motivations. Experiences in several countries are here analysed, on the basis of a bibliographic revision of the period 1950-1990. Results show that existing studies vary in their conceptual and methodological focuses, according to the region in which research was carried out and to the kind of researcher involved. This fact is to be explained by the posture, common among researchers, of believing that they know in depth the subjective determinants of the behavior of the societies to which they belong. Based on this, they only use methodologies that allow them to arrive at a superficial understanding regarding the response of populations to the offer of vaccines.

Downloads

Published

1997-06-01

Issue

Section

Current Comments

How to Cite

Nigenda-López, G., Orozco, E., & Leyva, R. (1997). Motives for non-vaccination: critical review of the international literature, 1950-1990 . Revista De Saúde Pública, 31(3), 313-321. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0034-89101997000300015