Beliefs in vaccine as causes of autism among SPARK cohort caregivers. Issue 7 (11th February 2020)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Beliefs in vaccine as causes of autism among SPARK cohort caregivers. Issue 7 (11th February 2020)
- Main Title:
- Beliefs in vaccine as causes of autism among SPARK cohort caregivers
- Authors:
- Abbeduto, Leonard
Aberbach, Gabriella
Acampado, John
Ace, Andrea J.
Albright, Charles
Alessandri, Michael
Amaral, David G.
Amatya, Alpha
Anglo, Claudine
Annett, Robert D.
Arriaga, Ivette
Ashley, Raven
Astrovskaya, Irina
Baalman, Kelly
Baer, Melissa
Bahl, Ethan
Balasubramanian, Adithya
Baraghoshi, Gabrielle
Bardett, Nicole
Barnard, Rebecca A.
Bashar, Asif
Beaudet, Arthur
Beckwith, Malia
Beeson, Landon
Bentley, Dawn
Bernier, Raphael A.
Berry-Kravis, Elizabeth
Boland, Sarah
Booker, Stephanie
Bradley, Catherine
Brewster, Stephanie J.
Brooks, Elizabeth
Brown, Melissa
Brueggeman, Leo
Butler, Martin E.
Butter, Eric M.
Callahan, Kristen
Camba, Alexies
Carbone, Paul
Carpenter, Laura
Carpenter, Sarah
Carriero, Nicholas
Cartner, Lindsey A.
Casten, Lucas
Chatha, Ahmad S.
Chin, Wubin
Chintalapalli, Sharmista
Cho, Daniel
Chung, Wendy K.
Clark, Renee D.
Cohen, Cheryl
Coleman, Kendra
Columbi, Costanza
Coppola, Leigh
Courchesne, Eric
Cubells, Joseph F.
Hannah Currin, Mary
Daniels, Amy M.
David, Giancarla
DeMarco, Lindsey
Dennis, Megan Y.
Dent, Kate
Dichter, Gabriel S.
Ding, Yan
Dinh, Huyen
Doan, Ryan
Doddapaneni, HarshaVardhan
Eichler, Evan E.
Eldred, Sara
Eng, Christine
Erickson, Craig A.
Esler, Amy
Fatemi, Ali
Feliciano, Pamela
Fischer, Gregory
Fish, Angela
Fisk, Ian
Fombonne, Eric J.
Foster, Margaret
Fox, Emily A.
Francis, Sunday
Friedman, Sandra L.
Ganesan, Swami
Garrett, Michael
Gazestani, Vahid
Geisheker, Madeleine R.
Gerdts, Jennifer A.
Geschwind, Daniel H.
Ghaziuddin, Mohammad
Gibbs, Richard A.
Goin-Kochel, Robin P.
Gonzalez, Natalia
Goudreau, Lindsey
Griswold, Anthony J.
Grosvenor, Luke P.
Gruber, Angela J.
Gulsrud, Amanda C.
Gunderson, Jaclyn
Gunter, Chris
Gupta, Abha
Gutierrez, Anibal
Hale, Melissa N.
Haley, Monica
Hall, Jacob B.
Hamer, Kira E.
Han, Bing
Hanna, Nathan
Hardan, Antonio
Harkins, Christina
Harrington, Gloria
Harris, Jill
Harris, Nina
Hauf, Brenda
Hayes, Caitlin
Heerwagen, Kathryn
Hepburn, Susan L.
Herbert, Lynette M.
Heyman, Michelle
Higgins, Lorrin
Hilscher, Brittani A.
Hofammann, Eugenia
Hojlo, Margaret
Horner, Susannah
Hsieh, Alexander
Hu, Jianhong
Huang-Storms, Lark Y.
Hunter, Samantha
Hutter, Hanna
Istephanous, Dalia
Jacob, Suma
Jaramillo, Nancy
Jelinek, Anna
Jensen, William
Jones, Mark
Jordy, Michelle
Jorgenson, Alissa
Jou, Roger
Pablo Juarez, A.
Judge, Jessyca
Jurayj, Jane
Kalmus, Taylor
Kanne, Stephen
Kaplan, Hannah E.
Kasparson, Lauren
Kent, Matt
Hyun Kim, So
Kitaygorodsky, Alex
Koene, Hope
Koomar, Tanner
Korchina, Viktoriya
Krentz, Anthony D.
Lam Schneider, Hoa
Lamarche, Elena
Lampert, Erica
Landa, Rebecca J.
Lash, Alex E.
Kiely Law, J.
Lawson, Noah
Layman, Kevin
Lechniak, Holly
Lee, Sandra
Lee, Soo J.
Lee Coury, Daniel
Lese Martin, Christa
Lesher, Laurie
Li, Hai
Li, Deana
Lillie, Natasha
Liu, Xiuping
Lopez, Marilyn
Lord, Catherine
Lowe, Kathryn
Mallardi, Malcolm D.
Manning, Patricia
Manoharan, Julie
Marini, Richard
Martin, Christa
Marzano, Gabriela
Mason, Andrew
Mastel, Sarah
Matthews, Emily T.
McCracken, James T.
McKenzie, Alexander P.
Miceli, Alexandra
Michaelson, Jacob J.
Milliken, Anna
Mohiuddin, Sarah
Momin, Zeineen
Morrier, Michael J.
Mostofsky, Stewart
Murali, Shwetha
Muzny, Donna
Myers, Vincent J.
Neely, Jason
Nessner, Caitlin
Nicholson, Amy
Niederhouser, Melanie
O'Brien, Kaela
O'Connor, Eirene
O'Neil, Molly
O'Roak, Brian J.
Ochoa-Lubinoff, Cesar
Orobio, Jessica
Orrick, Libby
Ortiz, Crissy
Ousley, Opal Y.
Pacheco, Lillian D.
Palmer, Samiza
Pandey, Juhi
Marie Paolicelli, Anna
Pawlowski, Katherine G.
Pierce, Karen L.
Piven, Joseph
Plate, Samantha
Polanco, Jose
Popp, Marc
Pottschmidt, Natalie
Pramparo, Tiziano
Prock, Lisa M.
Qi, Hongjian
Qiu, Shanping
Rachubinski, Angela L.
Rajbhandari, Kshitij
Rana, Rishiraj
Ranganathan, Vai
Raymond, Laurie
Remington, Rick
Rice, Catherine E.
Rigby, Chris
Robertson, Beverly E.
Rodriguez, Nicki
Rodriguez, Barbara
Roeder, Katherine
Rosenberg, Cordelia R.
Russo-Ponsaran, Nicole
Ruzzo, Elizabeth
Sabo, Aniko
Sahin, Mustafa
Salomatov, Andrei
Sandhu, Sophia
Santangelo, Susan
Sarver, Dustin E.
Scherr, Jessica
Schultz, Robert T.
Schweers, Kathryn A.
Shaffer, Rebecca
Shah, Swapnil
Shaikh, Tamim
Shen, Yufeng
Shocklee, Amanda D.
Shulman, Lisa
Siegel, Matthew
Simon, Andrea R.
Simon, Laura
Singh, Vini
Skinner, Steve
Smith, Christopher J.
Smith, Kaitlin
Snyder, LeeAnne G.
Soorya, Latha V.
Soucy, Aubrie
Stamps, Danielle
Steele, Morgan
Stephens, Alexandra N.
Stock, Colleen M.
Sullivan, Catherine
Sutcliffe, James S.
Sutcliffe, James S.
Swanson, Amy
Tafolla, Maira
Takahashi, Nicole
Taylor, Cora
Thomas, Carrie
Thomas, Taylor
Thompson, Samantha
Tjernagel, Jennifer
Turner, Tychele N.
Valicenti-McDermott, Maria
Van Metre, Bonnie
Van Wade, Candace
Veenstra-Vanderweele, Jeremy
Verdi, Mary
Vernoia, Brianna M.
Volfovsky, Natalia
Wallace, Jermel
Walston, Corrie H.
Wang, Jiayao
Wang, Tianyun
Warren, Zachary
Wasserburg, Lucy
White, Sabrina
Casey White-Lehman, L.
Wodka, Ericka L.
Xu, Simon
Yang, Wha S.
Yinger, Meredith
Youngkin, Sarah
Yu, Timothy
Zang, Lan
Zaydens, Hana
Zhang, Haicang
Zhao, Haoquan
Zhou, Xueya
Zick, Allyson
Fombonne, Eric
Goin-Kochel, Robin P.
O'Roak, Brian J.
… (more) - Abstract:
- Abstract: Background: Fear of autism has led to a decline in childhood-immunization uptake and to a resurgence of preventable infectious diseases. Identifying characteristics of parents who believe in a causal role of vaccines for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in their child may help targeting educational activities and improve adherence to the immunization schedule. Objectives: To compare caregivers of children with ASD who agree or disagree that vaccines play an etiological role in autism for 1) socio-demographics characteristics and 2) developmental and clinical profiles of their children. Methods: Data from 16, 525 participants with ASD under age 18 were obtained from SPARK, a national research cohort started in 2016. Caregivers completed questionnaires at registration that included questions on beliefs about the etiologic role of childhood immunizations and other factors in ASD. Data were available about family socio-demographic characteristics, first symptoms of autism, developmental regression, co-occurring psychiatric disorders, seizures, and current levels of functioning. Results: Participants with ASD were 80.4% male with a mean age of 8.1 years (SD = 4.1). Overall, 16.5% of caregivers endorsed immunizations as perceived causes of autism. Compared to caregivers who disagreed with vaccines as a cause for ASD, those who believed in vaccine causation came disproportionately from ethnic minority, less educated, and less wealthy backgrounds. More often their childrenAbstract: Background: Fear of autism has led to a decline in childhood-immunization uptake and to a resurgence of preventable infectious diseases. Identifying characteristics of parents who believe in a causal role of vaccines for autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in their child may help targeting educational activities and improve adherence to the immunization schedule. Objectives: To compare caregivers of children with ASD who agree or disagree that vaccines play an etiological role in autism for 1) socio-demographics characteristics and 2) developmental and clinical profiles of their children. Methods: Data from 16, 525 participants with ASD under age 18 were obtained from SPARK, a national research cohort started in 2016. Caregivers completed questionnaires at registration that included questions on beliefs about the etiologic role of childhood immunizations and other factors in ASD. Data were available about family socio-demographic characteristics, first symptoms of autism, developmental regression, co-occurring psychiatric disorders, seizures, and current levels of functioning. Results: Participants with ASD were 80.4% male with a mean age of 8.1 years (SD = 4.1). Overall, 16.5% of caregivers endorsed immunizations as perceived causes of autism. Compared to caregivers who disagreed with vaccines as a cause for ASD, those who believed in vaccine causation came disproportionately from ethnic minority, less educated, and less wealthy backgrounds. More often their children had experienced developmental regression involving language and other skills, were diagnosed earlier, had lost skills during the second year of life, and had worse language, adaptive, and cognitive outcomes. Conclusion: One in six caregivers who participate in a national research cohort believe that child immunizations could be a cause of autism in their child. Parent social background (non-White, less educated) and child developmental features (regression in second year, poorer language skills, and worse adaptive outcomes) index caregivers who are more likely to harbor these beliefs and could benefit from targeted educational activities. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Vaccine. Volume 38:Issue 7(2020)
- Journal:
- Vaccine
- Issue:
- Volume 38:Issue 7(2020)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 38, Issue 7 (2020)
- Year:
- 2020
- Volume:
- 38
- Issue:
- 7
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2020-0038-0007-0000
- Page Start:
- 1794
- Page End:
- 1803
- Publication Date:
- 2020-02-11
- Subjects:
- Autism -- Autism spectrum disorder -- Immunizations -- Vaccines -- Psychiatric disorder -- Seizure -- Disorder -- Sex -- Language -- Language delay -- Regression -- Intellectual disability -- Ethnicity -- Social factors
Vaccines -- Periodicals
615.372 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0264410X ↗
http://www.clinicalkey.com/dura/browse/journalIssue/0264410X ↗
http://www.clinicalkey.com.au/dura/browse/journalIssue/0264410X ↗
http://www.elsevier.com/journals ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.12.026 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 0264-410X
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
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- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - 9138.628000
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