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Assessment of knowledge and attitude among postnatal mothers towards childhood vaccination in Malaysia

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dc.contributor.author Helvinder Kaur Balbir Sigh
dc.contributor.author Vishal Bhagwan Badgujar
dc.contributor.author Rose Suzila Yahaya
dc.contributor.author Santibuana Abd Rahman
dc.contributor.author Farheen Mohd Sami
dc.contributor.author Sangeeta Badgujar
dc.contributor.author Subhashini Nair Govindan
dc.contributor.author Mohammed Tahir Ansari
dc.date.accessioned 2020-01-17T02:25:14Z
dc.date.available 2020-01-17T02:25:14Z
dc.date.issued 2019-05-09
dc.identifier.issn 2164-5515
dc.identifier.issn 2164-554X
dc.identifier.uri 10.1080/21645515.2019.1612666
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.unikl.edu.my/jspui/handle/123456789/23647
dc.description.abstract Aim: Mothers knowledge and attitude toward childhood vaccination influence uptake is the most adequate tool and preventive aspects to infectious disease epidemics. The present study assesses and measures knowledge and attitude of postnatal mothers toward vaccination. Methods and results: The present study adopted a cross-sectional study design, whereby 200 postnatal mothers were identified during their postnatal visit to clinics. The subjects were accessed using questionnaire to assess the level of knowledge and attitude of mothers regarding vaccination. The objectives were to study the level of knowledge, the attitude, and to find the association between knowledge and attitude of the study subjects. The data were analyzed using SPSS version 16. The results was analyzed through chi-square test. The association between age (p = .031), education (p = .021), occupation (p = .013), and knowledge score toward vaccination was found to be statistically significant. However, ethnicity (p = .127), employment (p = .197), and mode of delivery (p = .750) toward mothers vaccination knowledge were not significant for the study. Mothers education, age, and occupation were found to be associated with attitude toward childhood vaccination. No association was found between ethnicity, employment, and mode of delivery with attitude of childhood vaccination. Conclusion: More than half of the studied mothers had good knowledge scores on vaccination, more than two-thirds of the studied mothers had good attitude scores on vaccination. However, the religious misconception and fear of autism was the main cause of vaccine resistance in Malaysia. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics en_US
dc.subject Fault-tolerant en_US
dc.subject Quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) en_US
dc.subject Rotated majority gate en_US
dc.subject Universal shift register (USR) en_US
dc.title Assessment of knowledge and attitude among postnatal mothers towards childhood vaccination in Malaysia en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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