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Report
17 Июль 2018
In Focus: Immunization
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/focus-immunization
Immunization is one of the world’s most cost-effective public health interventions, saving millions of lives each year, and protecting children from illness and disability. Vaccines have helped to halve the number of child deaths worldwide since 1990 and represent a sound financial investment: every $1 spent on childhood immunizations returns an estimated $44 in economic and social benefits. Despite the achievements of immunization programmes in the Europe and Central Asia Region in recent decades, reported immunization rates are uneven across countries — from as high as 98 percent in Albania to as low as 19 percent in Ukraine. The regional average for Eastern Europe and Central Asia stands at 92 percent, still not high enough to protect all children from preventable diseases. What’s more, there was no improvement in coverage between 2014 and 2016. At national levels, disparities can be shocking, with the most vulnerable children often missing out on immunization. Across the Region, more than half a million children have missed out on their routine measles vaccination, and many countries continue to face outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases that threaten the lives and well-being of children. Challenges to immunization include weak political commitment and health systems, ‘vaccine hesitancy,’ and concerns about the financial sustainability of national immunization programmes in middle-income countries. UNICEF knows that the whole Region benefits when ALL countries achieve and maintain high vaccine coverage at both national and sub-national levels. Download file (PDF, 981,23 KB) July 2018
Page
24 Апрель 2019
World Immunization Week 2019
https://www.unicef.org/eca/health/immunization/world-immunization-week-2019
Vaccines act as a shield, protecting children and newborn babies from dangerous diseases and saving up to 3 million lives each year. Yet, there are still nearly 20 million unvaccinated and under-vaccinated children in the world today. These children are at risk of serious illness, complications, and even death. Many parents want to vaccinate their children, but can’t because they don’t have access to healthcare. But increasingly, some parents are choosing not to. This reluctance often stems from misconceptions about vaccines, or complacency about the likelihood of getting infected. That’s why staying informed about the benefits of vaccines – and the risks of not getting vaccinated – is more important than ever. This World Immunization Week, UNICEF is launching a global campaign to emphasize the power and safety of vaccines among parents and social media users. From 24-30 April, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will contribute US$1 to UNICEF for every like or share of social media posts using the hashtag #VaccinesWork, up to US$1 million, to ensure all children get the life-saving vaccines they need. Help protect children from deadly diseases by telling parents around the world,  #VaccinesWork !  
Article
01 Май 2019
Vaccinations with a smile in Uzbekistan
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/vaccinations-smile-uzbekistan
Baby Imona is visiting the clinic, but there is no fear or tension, because Nurse Aziza Abduazimova knows how to put her and her parents at ease. Aziza’s open face and sweet, cheerful manner make all of the children she meets comfortable. “I always meet babies with a smile. Then I answer all of the parents’ questions about vaccinations so that they feel they can trust me with their child’s health. I make the child comfortable, and chat and play with them. I use toys to create a relationship before vaccinating them.” Aziza has been immunising children at Polyclinic #47 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan for six years now. She says that she loves her job. “I’m a mother myself. I have three sons aged 15, 12 and 10 years old who are all vaccinated and growing up healthy. I didn’t have a moment’s hesitation in getting my children vaccinated, and I am happy to help other mothers raise strong and healthy kids.” Aziza believes that it’s much better to vaccinate a child and prevent a disease than treat the sometimes-serious consequences of an illness. “Polio can cause permanent paralysis. Mumps, a common childhood disease, can make boys infertile, and measles can be fatal. It’s not just the consequences for the individual, either. A child who hasn’t been vaccinated is putting everyone else at risk, including babies and unvaccinated adults.” Nurse Aziza Abduazimova administers the polio vaccine to baby Imona. Nurse Aziza Abduazimova administers the polio vaccine to baby Imona. However, despite all the evidence about the safety of vaccines to prevent serious disease, some parents are still hesitant. “It’s a natural urge for a mother to protect her baby, and some mothers are scared to cause their baby the pain of an injection,” Aziza says. “Believe me, when I first started this job, I used to cry along with the babies, but then I realised that by causing this brief moment of pain, I’m preventing a lot of future suffering.” Some parents read things on the internet that scare them. Aziza says, “I follow a lot of discussions on the web and I often post evidence to prove that they needn’t worry. All the vaccines used in Uzbekistan meet international standards.” Aziza recalls a young mother who didn’t vaccinate her first son. “He got every childhood disease, one after the other, including Hepatitis A. With my encouragement she decided to vaccinate her younger son. He has grown up very healthy. Now when people see them together, they assume the younger one is older because he wasn’t sick as often, he’s so much taller and stronger than his brother. His mother tells everyone her story. She says, ‘If I’d had my older son vaccinated, I wouldn’t have gone through all these troubles.’” Aziza helps parents who have concerns about vaccinations to meet mothers and fathers with children who have been fully immunised. “Peer to peer conversations are really helpful because parents trust fellow parents and they can see the results.” She believes being a good vaccinator isn’t just about following procedures but having the right attitude: “There was one lady who came from outside our clinic’s catchment area. She was surprised to find me so cheerful and friendly. In her previous experiences staff had been professional, but she told me my friendliness has made such a difference to her children; now they feel at ease during and after vaccinations. It makes such a difference how you treat people."  "Children pick up a lot from how you deal with them—they connect with a smile.” - adds Aziza. Nurse Aziza puts baby Imona at ease with a toy after administering a vaccine. With toys and smiles, baby Imona is at ease after receiving a vaccine. “My main message to parents would be to follow the vaccination calendar. Don’t wait or delay; it has been developed to protect against the most common diseases in this country and vaccinating on time gives your child the best protection.” Aziza gives baby Imona a last cuddle. She smiles, “Parents share the hope that their child will grow up healthy. In my work as a vaccinator, I can help make that happen.” UNICEF in Uzbekistan trains health professionals across the country to vaccinate children and works closely with the Government to ensure the vaccine system is safe and can reach all children with life-saving immunizations.
Page
24 Апрель 2019
Vaccine FAQs
https://www.unicef.org/eca/health/vaccine-faqs
Vaccines save lives. Measles vaccines alone are estimated to have prevented over 21 million deaths between 2000 and 2017. Vaccines will help protect your child against diseases that can cause serious harm or death, especially in people with developing immune systems like infants. It’s important to vaccinate your child. If not, highly contagious diseases such as measles, diphtheria and polio, which were once wiped out in many countries, will come back.
Article
16 Январь 2022
What you need to know about COVID-19 vaccines
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/what-you-need-know-about-covid-19-vaccines-0
Vaccines save millions of lives each year and a COVID-19 vaccine could save yours. The COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective, providing strong protection against serious illness and death. WHO reports that unvaccinated people have at least 10 times higher risk of death from COVID-19 than someone who has been vaccinated. There is also evidence that being vaccinated can help prevent you from spreading the virus, so it protects people around you. It is important to be vaccinated as soon as it’s your turn, even if you already had COVID-19. Vaccines offer more reliable protection than natural immunity. Getting vaccinated is a safer way for you to develop immunity from COVID-19 than getting infected. The COVID-19 vaccines are highly effective, but no vaccine provides 100 per cent protection. Some people will still get ill from COVID-19 after vaccination or pass the virus onto someone else.  Therefore, it is important to continue practicing safety precautions to protect yourself and others, including avoiding crowded spaces, physical distancing, hand washing and wearing a mask.
Article
01 Март 2019
Vaccination drive ongoing to protect children from deadly measles outbreak in Ukraine
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/vaccination-drive-ongoing-protect-children-deadly-measles-outbreak-ukraine
Uliana Dziuba, 36, is holding the hands of her two young children as they wait to receive their vaccination against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR). Unlike her brother Volodia, nine-year-old Maryana is anxious, but Uliana knows how important today is. “I used to refuse to vaccinate the children against measles,” she says. “Once, I refused because they were sick at the time. Another time, there was a very powerful anti-vaccination campaign on social media. But Maryana got measles at age three and now I’m very worried that my son will get sick. I am vaccinating both of them for the first time today.” The pair are among thousands of children now being vaccinated in Lviv region, Ukraine, after the Ministry of Health with support from UNICEF launched an immunization drive. It is using a combined approach: teams of mobile doctors are working to reach school-age children while local clinics are increasing their ability to vaccinate more children.  The drive is happening as UNICEF warns that global cases of measles have surged to alarmingly high levels – including in countries that had previously been declared measles free – eroding progress against this highly preventable, but potentially deadly disease. Maryana Dzuba, 9, receives her first dose of MMR vaccine on 21 February 2019 in the medical centre of the Lapaivka village school, Lviv region, Ukraine, as part of a three-week long catch-up vaccination campaign to increase MMR coverage among school aged children in the region. Maryana Dzuba, 9, receives her first dose of MMR vaccine on 21 February 2019 in the medical centre of the Lapaivka village school, Lviv region, Ukraine, as part of a three-week long catch-up vaccination campaign to increase MMR coverage among school aged children in the region. In Ukraine alone, according to Government data, there were more than 53,000 cases of measles in 2018. Another 24,000 people were infected just in the first two months of this year. The situation in Lviv region is particularly dangerous, with approximately 11,000 measles cases in 2018, and up to 50,000 unvaccinated children in the region. Of the 634 children attending Volodia and Maryana’s school in Lviv, only 13 remain unvaccinated due to the ongoing immunization drive. During the first two days, a total of 2,030 children were vaccinated. For many it was the first time. The vaccination drive also helps combat negative attitudes towards vaccination, as well as shortages in vaccine supply through 2009-2015. “Teachers and medical professionals have been campaigning for vaccinations,” says school headteacher Tetiana Malieryk. “We held all-school meetings and parent-teacher conferences, where the danger of measles was explained. Now fewer parents are refusing vaccinations and those children who did not receive vaccinations because of their parents’ beliefs are being vaccinated.” Next in line for vaccinations at the school in Lviv are six-year-old twins Vitalina and Yuliana. The girls and their mother Olesia Kechur, 37, are dressed in traditional embroidered clothing.  This will be their second vaccination against measles. Twins Vitalina and Yuliana Kechur, 6, are given a check-up by the doctor before receiving MMR vaccination on 21 February 2019 in the medical centre of the Lapaivka village school, Lviv region, western Ukraine. Twins Vitalina and Yuliana Kechur, 6, are given a check-up by the doctor before receiving MMR vaccination on 21 February 2019 in the medical centre of the Lapaivka village school, Lviv region, western Ukraine. “The mother is very responsible about vaccinations,” reports Halyna Narolska, their doctor. “They get all of them and don’t miss anything.” Narolska has been a doctor for over 30 years. During this time, she says, she has not seen a single complication from an MMR vaccine. “Temperature may increase and there may be rash on day four, but neither has happened to a single child that we have vaccinated,” she says. “The only way to stop the outbreak is to vaccinate all children.” “There is a measles outbreak all over the world,” remarked Ukraine’s Deputy Minister for Healthcare Olha Stefanyshyna, during a recent visit to Lviv. “However, Ukraine is sadly a leader among the European countries. This is why we need to take extraordinary measures. I would like to say that this campaign is aimed primarily at children who missed their vaccination against measles, mumps, and rubella in the past. Today, we have better coverage of children who are born now.” UNICEF and its partners are supporting governments to reach millions of children in countries around the globe with life-saving immunization. However, stronger commitment and actions to vaccinate more children and protect them from preventable diseases is critical – including in Ukraine.
Article
25 Апрель 2018
#VaccinesWork to protect children in Ukraine, amid measles outbreak
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/vaccineswork-protect-children-ukraine-amid-measles-outbreak
As a mother of two young children, Natalia was once told by her doctor that vaccinations were unnecessary. Now – with a measles outbreak gripping Ukraine –Natalia is glad she chose to ignore the doctor’s advice and instead vaccinate her children. This recent national outbreak has affected 16,500 people and killed 13, including nine children. According to a UNICEF poll taken in 2016, 16 percent of parents in Ukraine have refused vaccinations for their children.  Natalia with her two children in a park in Kyiv. Natalia, with her two young children in a park in Kyiv. “Many parents I know still refuse to vaccinate their children,” says Natalia, whose children received the MMR vaccine against measles, mumps and rubella. “They say the vaccines are bad, that they have adverse effects. My children are fine and I think their health is more important.” Ukraine’s Ministry of Health has been leading the outbreak response since 2017 with support from UNICEF and other partners. While less than half of all children in the country were vaccinated against measles as part of routine immunization in 2016 (via the MMR vaccine), the number more than doubled in 2017 to over 90 percent, according to the Ministry. Valentyna Ginzburg, a doctor who heads Kyiv’s state healthcare department, says she and her team have been working to combat the measles outbreak since first being alerted to a rise in infections following the New Year and Orthodox Christmas celebrations in 2018. “We received information on the incidence rates of measles in Kyiv,” Dr. Ginzburg says. “We knew we needed to take rapid action to prevent a situation similar to other regions, such as Odesa, where there had already been fatalities amongst both adults and children from the illness.” Measles is one of the most contagious diseases around and we understood that if we were not proactive and did not control it, it would have not been long before we had the same situation as in other regions. Dr. Ginzburg Dr. Ginzburg explains how she and her colleagues had to act quickly to stop the spread of the disease in Kyiv. UNICEF/2018/Krepkih Dr. Ginzburg explains how she and her colleagues had to act quickly to stop the spread of the disease in Kyiv. In the four days that followed, 11,000 children were vaccinated in Kyiv. Around 48,000 children were immunized from January to March, a tally that would normally take 12 months to reach. Following national recommendations on outbreak response, authorities in Kyiv launched a ‘situation room’ to collect the latest information and coordinate response actions. Being vaccinated was also made a pre-condition for children attending schools and preschools to help stop the spread. The city administration also encouraged medical specialists to visit schools and raise awareness of vaccination among both teachers and parents.  Maryna Stefanenko, a pediatrician at a clinic on the left bank of Kyiv, gives more details. “We had a lot of people coming in, even those who normally go to private clinics,” she says. Dr Stefanenko’s clinic usually administers around 80 vaccines per day, but during the outbreak they were immunizing around 1,200 people each day.   On the other side of the city, in Obolon district, another clinic rushed to meet demand. A pediatrician there, Dr Natalia Yatsenko, explained that as part of her job, she must sign the paperwork for parents who refuse to vaccinate their children. She says she spends a lot of time explaining the benefits of vaccination, as well as the risks for children who do not receive their shot. Before the measles outbreak, she managed to talk some 10 per cent of objectors into changing their mind. However, during the outbreak, she did not even have to persuade them – many parents who were once against vaccinations were very keen to bring their children to the clinic. A young boy receives several vaccines at a time at Dr Natalia Yatsenko clinic in Kyiv. A young boy receives several vaccines at a time at Dr Natalia Yatsenko clinic in Kyiv. Another factor in the response? The effects of armed conflict in eastern Ukraine. “We had some internally displaced people from the eastern regions who came to our clinic,” says Yatsenko. “They told us that their children’s vaccination records had been falsified, and now they wanted to vaccinate them for real. So we vaccinated them.” “We also vaccinated some parents,” adds Stefanenko. “The parents bought the vaccines for themselves from the pharmacy then brought them to us and we administered the shots.” Dr. Ginzburg also advocated with the Kyiv authorities to address one of the biggest issues the country is struggling with - access to vaccines for adults and health workers. “All health workers had to be checked and those who required vaccination had to be immunized,” she says. “Then we were sure that, no matter what, the doctors wouldn’t be incapacitated.” The city administration also made sure the municipal pharmacy chain had measles vaccines available for adults. Artem, six, receives his second dose of the MMR (mumps, measles, rubella) vaccine in Kyiv. Artem, six, receives his second dose of the MMR (mumps, measles, rubella) vaccine in Kyiv. Although vaccines for children were available in 2017, increased demand had depleted stocks in some regions. To help replenish stocks, a new expedited supply of MMR vaccines was delivered by UNICEF at the request of the Ministry of Health at the end of February 2018, and another 800,000 doses are due this month, to ensure sufficient vaccines for both routine immunization of children and those who may have missed their immunizations in previous years. Significant progress has been made in reaching more children with vaccines, yet still an estimated 1.5 million children die globally from vaccine preventable diseases every year and an estimated half a million children in the region are still not immunized. Millions of lives can be saved by extending basic health services like routine immunization to the most vulnerable and disadvantaged, and UNICEF is on the ground immunizing millions of children each year . Vaccines protect children against disease and death, saving up to three million lives every year. In short, #VaccinesWork. 
Report
01 Апрель 2013
Tracking anti-vaccination sentiment in Eastern European social media networks
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/tracking-anti-vaccination-sentiment-eastern-european-social-media-networks
Page 1 Page 2 A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes. Mark Twains quote is more relevant than ever in times of online communication, where information or misinformation, bundled in bits and bytes, streams around the earth within seconds. SUMMARY DISCLAIMERUNICEF working papers aim to facilitate greater exchange of knowledge and stimulate analytical discussion on an issue. This text has not been edited to official publications standards. Extracts from this paper may be freely reproduced with due acknowledgement. For the purposes of this research, no personal data has been extracted and stored for data collection and analysis. This UNICEF working paper aims to track and analyse online anti-vaccination sentiment in social media networks by examining conversations across social media in English, Russian, Romanian and Polish. The findings support the assumption that parents actively use social networks and blogs to inform their decisions on vaccinating their children. The paper proposes a research model that detects and clusters commonly-used keywords and intensity of user interaction. The end goal is the development of targeted and efficient engagement strategies for health and communication experts in the field as well as for partner organisations. Page 3 CONTENT1. Rationale 2. Introduction 2.1 Social Media: the conversation shift 2.2 Social Media: Fertile ground for anti- vaccination sentiment 2.3 Social Media Monitoring 2.4 Influencers 3. Research Objectives 4. Methodology 4.1 Descriptive and Explorative Research Design 4.2 Data Collection 4.3 Limitations 4.4 Ethical Considerations 5. Empirical Findings 5.1 Networks: Volume and Engagement 5.2 Common Arguments 5.2.1 Religious and Ethical Beliefs 5.2.2 Side Effects 5.2.3 Development Disabilities 5.2.4 Chemicals, Toxins and Unnecessary 5.2.5 Conspiracy Theory, Western Plot and Conflict of Interest 5.3 Influencers 6. Discussion and Recommendations 6.1 Discussion 6.2 Recommendation Acknowledgements Literature Appendix 4 555 78 9 1111121313 1414191920212222 23 252527 313134 Page 4 Over the past few years, the region of Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States has been troubled by the rise of a strong anti-vaccine sentiment, particularly via the internet. Wide ranging in origin, motive, source, and specific objectives, this online sentiment has succeeded in influencing the vaccination decisions of young parents, in many instances negatively. A number of factors are at play in this online anti-vaccine sentiment. First, vaccination coverage in this region is generally high. As a result, vaccine-preventable childhood diseases like polio and measles have been absent in most countries for the past few decades. This has led to complacency toward the diseases and has unfortunately made vaccines, rather than the diseases, the focus of debate and discussion. Meanwhile, poorly-managed immunization campaigns in some countries have caused widespread mistrust of vaccines and government vaccination programs. Most countries have run sluggish, high-handed public communication campaigns while avoiding transparent dialogue with the public on possible side effects, coincidental adverse events and other safety issues. Moreover, when new vaccines have been introduced, they have often just exacerbated the publics existing doubts, hesitations or outright resistance. Into this mix, rapid penetration of the internet in the region has provided a powerful, pervasive platform for anti-vaccine messages to be disseminated. Rooted in scientific and pseudo-scientific online sources of information, messages are often manipulated and misinterpreted, undermining the confidence of parents and causing them to question the need for, and efficiency of, vaccines. The result is hesitation towards vaccination, which in large numbers poses a serious threat to the health and rights of children.This paper aims to examine this rapidly growing phenomenon and its global lessons. Depending on the nature of the problem, special strategies need to be developed to tactically address and counter, diffuse or mitigate its impact on ordinary parents. The prevailing approach of most governments in largely ignoring these forces is unlikely to address this growing phenomenon. Governments, international agencies and other partners - in particular the medical community - need to combine forces to identify the source and arguments of these online influences, map the extent to which they control negative decisions, develop more effective communication strategies and ultimately reverse this counterproductive trend. RATIONALE Page 5 The first part of this paper describes how anti-vaccination groups communicate and how social networks connect concerned parents in new ways. The second part emphasizes the role of social media monitoring in strategic communication, based on understanding audience needs. 2.1 Social media: The conversation shifts The rise of social networks has changed both the way we communicate and the way we consume information. Even within the relatively recent internet era, a major evolution has occurred: In the initial phase known as Web 1.0, users by-and-large consumed online information passively. Now, in the age of social media and Web 2.0, the internet is increasingly used for participation, interaction, conversation and community building1. At the same time, conversations or social interactions that used to occur in community centres, streets, markets and households have partly shifted to social media2. Parents, for instance, suddenly have an array of collaborative social media tools with which to create, edit, upload and share opinions with their friends, peers and the wider community. These conversations are recorded, archived and publicly available. 2.2 Social media: Fertile ground for anti-vaccination sentiment In todays information age, anyone with access to the internet can publish their thoughts and opinions. On health matters in particular, the public increasingly searches online for information to support or counter specialised, expert knowledge in medicine3. Due to the open nature of user participation, health messages, concerns and misinformation can spread across the globe in a rapid, efficient manner4. In this way, social media may influence vaccination decisions by delivering both scientific and pseudo-scientific information that alters the perceived personal risk of both vaccine-preventable diseases and vaccination side effects. INTRODUCTION 1 Constantinides et al, 2007 2 Phillips et al, 2009; Brown, 2009 3 Kata, 2012 4 Betsch et al, 2012 Page 6 In addition to this accelerated flow of information (whether accurate or not), social media messages tend to resonate particularly well among users who read or post personal stories that contain high emotional appeal. This holds true for anti-vaccination messages too. In other words, both logistically and qualitatively, social media is intensifying the reach and power of anti-vaccination messages. Negative reactions to vaccines are increasingly being shared across online platforms. All of this leads to a frustrating predicament and critical challenge: Immunizations protect people from deadly, contagious diseases such as measles, whooping cough and polio. But parents influenced by anti-vaccination sentiment often believe vaccines cause autism, brain damage, HIV and other conditions, and have begun refusing them for their children. As a consequence, health workers face misinformed, angry parents, and countries face outbreaks of out-dated diseases and preventable childhood deaths5. Why do anti-vaccination messages resonate with so many parents in the first place? Parental hesitation regarding vaccinations is thought to stem from two key emotions: fear and distrust: Vaccination is a scary act for many children and parents. A biological agent is injected into the child. The way the biological agent works in the childs body is for most people unclear, which appeals to parents fears. The high level of distrust stems from the intersection of government, medicine and pharmaceutical industry. The nature of its act and the fact that vaccinations are mostly compulsory leads to worries among citizens. (Seth Mnookin, 2011) This distrust, along with the interactive nature of social media, suggests an urgent need for health workers to become attuned to arguments and concerns of parents in different locations and of various cultural backgrounds. To achieve more synergistic relationships with an audience, organisations need to shift their communications strategy from getting attention to giving attention6. Compounding this challenge is the fact that some anti-vaccination groups are not merely sceptics or devils advocates, but operate in an organized, deliberate and even ideological manner. These anti-vaccination groups often employ heavy-handed 5 Melnick, 20116 Chaffrey et al, 2008 Page 7 communication tactics when dealing with opponents: they delete critical comments on controlled media channels, such as blogs7 ; they mobilize to complain about scientists and writers critical of their cause; sometimes they go going as far as to take legal action to prohibit the publishing of pro-vaccine material. Governments and organisations aim to keep parents accurately informed about vaccinating their children. As more of the public conversation indeed battle takes place across social media, there is an urgent need to understand this online landscape. This, in turn, requires the use of effective monitoring tools. 2.3 Social media monitoring Social media analysis plays an important strategic role in understanding new forms of user-generated content8 . Indeed, this type of monitoring has become a leading trend in Marketing, PR, political campaigns, financial markets and other sectors. As demand for this kind of data increases, more monitoring tools are becoming available. These tools search social networks for relevant content, and archive the publicly available conversation in a database. Researchers conduct their internet analysis primarily by formulating combinations of keywords that can be placed in relation and weighted for importance. There are four different types of social media monitoring: Monitoring by volume looks at the amount of mentions, views and posts a topic, organization or user receives. Monitoring by channels maps and examines the various networks that users use to exchange content. Monitoring by engagement seeks deeper insight into how many users actually respond, like, share and participate with the content. Monitoring by sentiment analysis is a qualitative approach that uses word libraries to detect positive or negative attitudes by users towards an issue9. The first phase in social media monitoring is listening to what users say, because in order, for instance, to engage effectively with parents on social networks, it is important to know what they are talking about10. 7 Kata, 2012 8 Cooke et al, 2008 9 The approach must employ qualitative analysis as machines are not able to track sarcasm or slang. 10 Kotler et al, 2007 Page 8 Social media monitoring is a young discipline that began just a few years ago, and in its initial phase the practice faced a number of challenges. Data was very complex, so first generation monitoring tools produced results that were unstructured and generally overwhelming11. Even when that data was sorted and structured, organizations struggled to generate actionable management recommendations from it12. Since that time, however, social media professionals and research communities have made steady progress in overcoming the early challenges. 2.4 Influencers Recent studies on social media networks emphasize the central role played by influential individuals in shaping attitudes and disseminating information13. Indeed, it is argued that a group of such influencers is responsible for driving trends, influencing public opinion and recommending products14. One study found that 78% of consumers trusted social peer recommendations, while just 14% trusted advertisements15. Intensive interaction and content sharing through social media means that an audience instinctively determines its own opinion leaders. What makes opinion leaders particularly interesting and important from our perspective is that they add their personal interpretation to the media content and pass it on to their audience. Depending on whether these influencers speak responsibly or not, this can have positive or negative impact on the goal of disseminating accurate information. In his book The Panic Virus, journalist Seth Mnookin offers some examples of controversial influencers: A British gastroenterologist, Andrew Wakefield, entered into the vaccine discourse and alleged that the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine might cause autism. The medical community eventually dispelled his arguments and he lost his medical license. For a decade Wakefield - though not a public health specialist - very successfully disseminated misleading information and garnered a significant social media following. Meanwhile, actress and model Jenny McCarthy has become another self-proclaimed expert on vaccine safety. Through frequent public appearances she has positioned herself as an 11 Wiesenfeld et al, 201012 Owyang et al, 201013 Tsang et al, 2005; Kiss et al, 2008; Bodendorf et al, 201014 Keller and Berry, 200315 Qualman, 2010 Page 9 educated, internet-savvy mother set on challenging the medical establishments information about vaccinations. This, too, has helped fuel the recent growth in anti-vaccination sentiments. The public following and authority gained by Wakefield and McCarthy demonstrate how with the proliferation of online channels and the user as the centre of attention, it becomes difficult for information seekers to differentiate between professional and amateur content16. By the time the record is set straight, trust in immunization is been partly destroyed. Fostering the positive opinion of influencers in communities can have a disproportionately large impact in terms of online reputation17. Though they may not know each other in the real world, and despite ever-expanding advertisement platforms and sources, consumers around the world still place their greatest trust in other consumers18. Audiences listen to opinion leaders because they are known to be independent, credible and loyal to their peers19. Identifying and influencing the influencers of the social media conversation in the region should therefore be part of any effective strategy to reinforce positive messages in the vaccination debate. Though the internet is increasingly used to search for health information, a number of questions about social media and vaccination decisions are still unanswered: Which channels are used by anti-vaccination groups? What are the key arguments and conversation themes? What makes anti-vaccination messages appealing to parents? Who are the opinion leaders in online discussions? What are the best strategies to respond to anti-vaccination arguments? This paper seeks to understand the internal dynamics of anti-vaccination sentiment in social media networks in Eastern RESEARCHOBJECTIVES 16 Cooke et al, 200817 Ryan et al, 200918 Nielsen, 200919 Weiman, 1994 Page 10 Europe20. These insights are expected to help health workers, partners and national governments to develop appropriate response strategies in order to convince the public of the value, effectiveness and safety of vaccinations. The objectives of this research are: 1. To monitor social media networks, consolidate existing data and information from partners. 2. To categorize and analyse conversation themes, based on volume of discussion, influence, engagement and audience demographic as appropriate. 3. To identify influencers in the different language groups and platforms. 4. To contribute to a set of recommended strategies to address specific anti-vaccine sentiment around the various conversation themes. This content analysis is expected to help us understand the motivations and mind sets behind the sentiment, and offer clues that can inform the development of a strategy to effectively address the phenomenon. The research is also expected to help drawing comparisons between the anti-vaccination sentiment phenomenon and similar sentiments expressed against interventions in nutrition, child protection and other areas of UNICEF practice. This paper is supported by UNICEF Department of Communication in New York and UNICEF Regional Office for Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States. The region covers 22 countries and territories: Albania, Armenia, Azer-baijan, Belarus, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kosovo (UN Administered region), Kyrgyzstan, TFYR Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Roma-nia, The Russian Federation, Serbia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan. UNICEF does not have a country programme in the Russia Federation but is in discussions to develop a new mode of engagement. Page 11 In order to assess the dynamics of the anti-vaccination sentiments in the four languages, a systematic mapping and content analysis via social media monitoring is proposed. For the purpose of stakeholder monitoring in social media, a combination of descriptive and exploratory methods in form of quantitative and qualitative observation is proposed. According Wiesenfeld, Bush and Skidar (2010) it is reasonable to combine both methods because social media monitoring offers the richness of qualitative research, with the sample sizes of quantitative research. It may also give the opportunity to overcome problems associated with each research method in order to understand stakeholders dynamics in social media. 4.1 Descriptive and Explorative Research Design The descriptive methodology involves recording the activities of users and events in a systematic manner. Information is recorded as events occur and archived. Descriptive research in this case involves: Figure 1: Research Process for data gathering and analysis. METHODOLOGY 12 Aggregating text from public accessible social networks in in English, Russian, Polish and Romanian language. Cleaning and categorizing the data over time. The data is categorized and analysed into reoccurring conversation themes, based on volume of posts, engagement and audience demographic as appropriate. The exploratory methodology follows the descriptive research to allow for the interpretation of patterns and to provide background understanding of sentiment and attitudes of users. The results of the structured observation will be put into context by the human judgement of the researcher through the participant observation. In this research, the researcher will be a complete observer and will not interact with the users during the participant observation (Saunders et al, 2009). 4.2 Data Collection Traditional sampling techniques such as random, convenience or judgemental sampling are difficult to apply to a fluid social media environment. On top of the social media measurement process, the selected social media channels feed into the sample set. The posts are further categorized into different issue arenas that will be associated with relevant stakeholders. Figure 1 presents the data collection process for monitoring stakeholders in social media.The process contains the following six steps: 1. Channels: The first step of the data collection process involved the selection of relevant social media channels. Social media monitoring is instead generally considered to provide a complete set of all contributors, because tools like Radian6 or Sysomos are designed to capture a wide range of social media channels, such as blogs, forums, Twitter, Tumblr, Youtube and Facebook. 2. Demographics: The software gathered relevant posts that were posted in English, Russian, Polish and Romanian language3 during the period of 1 May and 30 July 2012. Posts could be submitted from all regions worldwide. 3. Context: The quality of data collection is determined by how well the collected data is gathered with regards to formulated searches. Keyword logic and search profiles were employed to filter the data. The full list of keyword combination can be found in Appendix A. 3The approach must employ qualitative analysis as machines are not able to track sarcasm or slang. Page 13 4. Data Collection: Relevant social media mentions that contained an issue-related keyword in relation to a stakeholder-related keyword was archived in the database. The list of relevant mentions was stored chronologically and assigned an ID. The full list of exported information about each mention was stored in a separate EXCEL file. 5. Data Analysis: The empirical application and content analysis of the relevant posts can be found in Chapter 6. 4.3 Limitations There are limitations in terms of reliability and validity of the recorded data. The data collection covers a three-months period. There is a need for caution when generalizing the data because events and evolution of discussions may alter the findings in other time periods. Therefore, limitations in reliability refer to reproducibility of research results. Reliability in the extent to which measures are free from error and therefore provide consistent results, such as the consistency of data availability in social media monitoring, is the second limitations. Quantitative observation has relatively high reliability because it reduces the potential for observer bias and enhances the reliability of data (Malhorta et al, 2007). However, social media monitoring might carry the risk of monitoring bias, as the relevant posts are extracted through keyword logic that is developed by the researcher. The collected data cannot be regarded as complete. For example, the share of Russian-speaking discussions seems to be fairly low compared to the amount of users accessing social media. Governmental control and censorship might also be contributing for lower volumes.The external validity, which is defined as the extent to which the research results are applicable to other research settings (Malhotra et al, 2007), is relatively low. Because of the richness of data, the sampling needs to be based on the experience of the researcher. As a disadvantage, the lack of established sampling technique in social media limits the ability to generalize the findings to other relevant issue arenas or stakeholders in the population. However, the ability to generalize the results was enhanced by careful use of the theoretical terms and relationships in the stakeholder literature (especially Freeman, 1984; Mitchell et al, 1997; Luoma-aho et al, 2010; Owyang et al, 2010). 4.4 Ethical Considerations Monitoring social media conversations raises two important questions about a) the protection of privacy, and b) ethical concerns. The growth of interest in social media monitoring has Page 14 triggered a new debate about ethics, which centers on what is in the public domain and what is not (Poynter, 2010). Privacy is a big issue, and social networking sites are under public criticism for lax attitudes regarding the security and respect of users privacy (Wakefield, 2011). It is the responsibility of the market researcher to protect a respondents identity and not disclose it to external audiences (Malhotra et al, 2007). Social media monitoring offers a rich volume of data, however the Internet is largely unregulated. The data of users around the world is stored on servers in the US and completely available to the US authorities. What might seem legal to the researcher may not necessarily be deemed morally right by society. Public interactions in social media are available for anyone and can be assigned to a personal IP address, geographic location, language, date and even specific computer. For the purposes of this research, no personal data has been extracted. The IP addresses and geographic locations have not been stored in the excel exports as it is not necessary for the purpose of the research. A unique post ID identifies each post. The following findings start with an overview of the networks used by the anti-vaccination community. Trends in volume and engagement are outlined in 5.1. In 5.2, clusters of common belief of the anti-vaccination sentiment are categorized and explained. The importance of influence in the anti-vaccination discussion is illustrated 5.3 because it is critical to understand that communication needs require adjustment to each country or region, which itself can present a challenge. 5.1 Networks: Volume and Engagement During May to July 2012, the researchers recorded messages with anti-vaccination sentiment from 22,349 participants. The majority of participants spoke English, followed by Polish, Russian and Romanian. EMPIRICALFINDINGS Page 15 Figure 2: Participants of anti-vaccination discussions per language. Across all four researched languages, blogs are the most frequently used channel for posting anti-vaccination content in social media. Blog is short for weblog, which is a website normally maintained by an individual (or group of individuals) and updated with regular entries. Entries are typically displayed in chronological order and tagged with relevant keywords and phrases. Blog visitors usually have the opportunity comment and share the content on blogs. Blogs are by far the most important channel in terms of volume of posts in Romanian (86% of all posts) and Polish (85% of all posts). In Russian discussions, 65% of all posts are submitted on blogs and in English nearly half of the anti-vaccination content (47%) is posted on blogs. Facebook is the second largest channel in terms of volume of posts. The social network has a share of 25% in English speaking networks, 13% in Polish, 8% in Romanian, and 5% in Russian channels. Facebook allows users to build personal profiles accessible to other users for exchange of personal content and communication via the Facebook. Twitter, which allows users to send brief (<140 character-long) updates, is the second largest channel in Russian-speaking (24% of the total volume) and fourth with 5% in English-speaking anti-vaccination communities. Other channels to consider are News websites and Forums in which users post comments to engage in discussions about specific topics. Since 68% of all participants in the anti-vaccination discussions during the observed time-period speak English, the dataset is able to reveal more accurate insights into demographics compared to the other languages. Insights in all languages can be found in Appendix 4, while the following analysis focuses on the English Page 16 data set. The English dataset also reveals that blogs have generally the highest rates of mentions (61%), conversations (67%), posts (67%) and interactions (43%). Based on the volume of posts, it is a logical consequence that most engagement takes place on blogs. Engagement is defined as followed: Post: An initial message submitted to a social networking site, i.e. a blog post, Facebook status, tweet, video, etc. Interaction: Any activity created as a direct response to an initial post, i.e. comments, likes, retweets, @replies, etc. Conversation: The sum of a post and all its related interactions. Note: a post with at least one interaction is considered as conversation. Mention: An appearance of search terms in a public social media space. Figure 3: Distribution by channel for Romanian, Russian, English and Polish networks Page 17 Blogs, forums, and Facebook are the leading networks for anti-vaccination discussions in English during the observed time-period. In other words, the anti-vaccination sentiments are expressed on those platforms through posting user-generated content. However, while conversations on forums only makeup 2% of total conversations, they account for 25% of all interactions among users. This indicates a heavily engaged audience. It can Figure 4: Mentions, Conversations, Posts and Interactions per channel. Page 18 be argued that opinions are formed during interactions among users and therefore, it is vital to add pro-vaccination content to the discussions on forums. Similarly, Facebook only contains 9% of conversations, but 21% of interactions. Both channels are important to consider for interactions with the anti-vaccination sentiment even if more posts occur on blogs. Similar findings occur in Forums. Forums are designed to be interactive conversation, where topics are discussed in greater depth. The English dataset is a reflection of this distinguish feature 16% of all posts and 25% of all interaction occur on Forums. The figures show that while the volume of content on Forums is relatively low, the engagement is an important strength that shaped the opinion in the anti-vaccination community. Figure 5 indicates that the data skews towards female audiences when issues such as developmental disabilities (59%), chemicals and toxins (56%) and side effects (54%) are discussed within the anti-vaccination sentiment, whereas men focus on arguments around conspiracy theory (63%) and religious/ethical beliefs (58%). Anti-vaccination social media participants are approximately 56% female and 44% male. Figure 5: Gender comparison in English per argument. Page 19 5.2 Common Arguments The amount of argument-mentions in anti-vaccination sentiment changes significantly by language during the observed time-period. Figure 6 illustrates that conspiracy theory and religious/ethical beliefs are the main topic trends in English, while religious/ethical beliefs drive the majority of discussions in Russian speaking anti-vaccination discussions. Polish anti-vaccination discussions are driven by arguments about side effects and chemicals and toxins in vaccines. The issue of chemicals and toxins is the major driver in Romanian discussions during the observed time-period. The arguments are described in detail in the following sections. The categories are based on keyword strings that were narrowed down over time. Issues should not be regarded in a static way, they might overlap and are interconnected. 5.2.1 Religious and Ethical Beliefs Religious and ethical discussions are especially active in discussion in Russian, with 96% of all anti-vaccination discussions focused on that issue. In English discussions, 32% of all anti-vaccination discussion use religious and ethical arguments. The arguments are less relevant in Polish (5%) and Romanian (0%) speaking anti-vaccination discussions. The main train of thought derives from Figure 6: Allocation of arguments by language for the anti-vaccination sentiment. Page 20 the belief that humans are created just as they should be and external interference is not required. My body was designed by God to be self healing and self regulating and no man will be able to do better than God is a quote by a female blog commentator from the US. Another user states, anything that involves substances that should never belong in a humans body, should not be injected or consumed without that individuals consent. Anti-vaccination advocates believe in homeopathy and alternative medicine. My BodyMy Decision writes a community member from Australia. A broad sentiment that mandatory vaccination is a violation of human rights can also be detected. From an ethical standpoint, the anti-vaccination community claims that it is a basic human right to be free from unwanted medical interventions, like vaccine injections. The same kind of argumentation can be recorded in all four languages. On June 15th 2012, the Polish Parliament voted to change the existing laws on vaccinations. The Act on Preventing and Fighting Infections and Infectious Diseases in Humans and in The Act on National Sanitary Inspection has created controversy among social media users because of it makes vaccination mandatory. The anti-vaccination advocates were sending petitions to the Polish President demanding him to stop the act. The petition received support from some representatives of the Catholic Church, but not an official support from the church as whole. Radio Maryja, the most powerful independent catholic media in the country, also critiqued the act based upon: The argument that vaccines are made based on cell lines derived from the bodies of babies killed by abortion. The notion of unethical activities by campaigning teenagers and women to be vaccinated against HPV infection and it is promoting immoral, and disorderly behaviour in the area of sexuality. 5.2.2 Safety and efficacy Side effects are the most common anti-vaccination theme in Polish networks (28%), but they also play a role in English networks (9%) and Romanian (5%). The argument is mentioned in less than 1% of all anti-vaccination discussions in Russian language. Typically, parents who reach out to online communities because they are unsure about vaccines trigger the discussions about side effects. Individual stories from parents are powerful because they humanize the discussion. One user writes, My baby is 5 months old, not vaccinated and he is going through pertussis right now! Its very scary! I HATE it! I have 3 children, the other 2 were vaccinated but Im scared to vaccinate my baby! Any other mommys new at Page 21 this? This quote reflects a level of fear and uncertainty about the right thing to do, even though the mother has experienced both the effect of vaccines and vaccine-preventable diseases. Another parent writes: My brother, sister in law, and all three kids under the age 5 were vaccinated for whooping cough and they all got it! An argument in a Russian network claims that live vaccines can mutate in the organism and create deadly strains. The fear of side effects leads to discussion about vaccines causing diseases and death. A user from the UK argues, The only way you can get this virus is if it is injected into you. Besides individual stories, argumentation backed by figures without context or sources are equally powerful in fostering fear of vaccines. For example, a member in one English network posts: Vaccinated children have up to 500% more diseases than unvaccinated children. Community members in Russia postulate that vaccinated children get sick 2-5 times more often than non-vaccinated children. For example in Romania, school nurses perform the mandatory vaccination during class, which is seen as a human rights violation and a safety issue. Parents are sceptical about the skills of the school nurses and feel surpassed by authorities in its decision to have children vaccinated. A user in a Polish anti-vaccination community states: I am a mother of two disabled children. When my daughter was five months old, she had a negative reaction to the vaccine, now she has been diagnosed with autism and mental retardation. For 10 years, I did not vaccinate my children and I would not want the right to decide on this matter taken away from me. I am an educated person, and have researched the subject and do not believe in the efficacy or safety of vaccinations. 5.2.3 Developmental Disabilities Another reoccurring argument in the anti-vaccination sentiment claims that vaccines contain toxins and harmful ingredients. Injecting vaccines into the body of a child leads to brain injury and developmental disabilities. This theme is discussed in 15% of all English and Polish speaking anti-vaccination discussions. Development Disabilities was in less than 1% of anti-vaccination discussions mentioned in Russian or Romanian networks. The arguments evolve from sentiment surrounding vaccines posing challenges to the immune system and producing antibodies that may cause autoimmune diseases. Another notable argument is that vaccines are not able to fight off the mutant viruses that develop over time. Across communities, anti-vaccination advocates link vaccines to Page 22 epilepsy, autism and neurodegenerative diseases (Parkinson and Alzheimer). A member of the Polish community writes: Mercury causes developmental disorders in children (including epilepsy and autism), in adults, neurodegenerative diseases (Parkinsons and Alzheimers), and degenerative changes in the reproductive systems of men and women, impairing their ability to reproduce offspring. It is notable that figures are used based on estimates by the author without links to sources. A Russian speaking user notes that vaccinations against pandemic influenza H1N1, also known as swine, can lead to the development of Guillain-Barr syndrome, acute poliradikulita in adults, according to Canadian researchers, published in the journal JAMA. 5.2.4 Chemicals, Toxins and Unnecessary(administration of vaccines) Our doctor has advised us to avoid vaccines in absence of a direct disease risk, since the long-term side effects have not been studied writes a member of an English-speaking community. One common argument recorded in the anti-vaccination sentiment is that studies about risks and impact of vaccinations are insufficient. Vaccines have not been tested enough and have concerns regarding the lack of long-term side effects studies. Another user states that I would really want to know whether and how well vaccine manufacturers test their final vaccine products () and how much contamination they discover. A common belief is that children having a vaccine-preventable illness just need food, water, and sanitation. In Polish communities, members use the example of Scandinavian countries lobbying for a ban of questionable and potentially harmful ingredients in vaccines. The notion that Scandinavian countries banned Thimerosal a long time ago and they have a much lower percentage of children with autism was classified was an important argument for users. Drawing on that example, the most common belief in Polish communities is that mercury may cause autism. A Russian-speaking user concludes, a recent large study confirms the results of other independent observations, which compared vaccinated and unvaccinated children. They all show that vaccinated children suffer 2 to 5 times more often than non-vaccinated children. Sources or links to the recited studies are not provided. 5.2.5 Conspiracy Theory, Western Plot and Conflict of Interest In English-speaking anti-vaccination communities (24%), a strong distrust against governments and pharmaceutical industry is Page 23 recorded. The same applies for Polish (5%), Russian (1%) and Romanian (3%) at a smaller scale. However, the U.S. and western governments are viewed critically when discussing about governments and conflict of interest. In Polish networks excessive vaccinations are seen as promoted by pharmaceutical companies in order to gain profits. The role of the pharmaceutical industry is discussed mostly negatively. The sector is regarded as corrupt marketing machine. An English-speaking user states that: In the vaccine industry, scientific fraud and conflicts of interests are causing a similar cycle of deaths and injuries that is being concealed and denied by regulators and vaccine manufacturers. The industry is viewed as profit-driven and has moved from its original purpose to save lives and protect humans. Romanian discussions directly blame the U.S. for purposefully infecting people with HIV using polio vaccines. Users create a direct link between vaccines and widespread HIV in Romanian orphanages. In the same sense, users claim that vaccines are being used against the Romanian populations. According to members of the anti-vaccination sentiment, vaccines against polio and chickenpox are used in Romania, which are not used in the U.S. anymore. Polish anti-vaccination communities state the examples of swine flu and bird flu two years ago. According to the users, both cases are plots by giant pharmaceutical companies. Some countries desperately bought a huge quantity of vaccines, while Poland acted rationally and did not buy the vaccines, which saved the state budget a couple of billion. The activists are suspicious because the epidemic ended after the new vaccines were purchased by several governments. The distrust against governments is also reflected in conspiracy theories. Patterns in English-speaking communities suggest that immunization is used to control and reduce the world population. One strain of argumentation is that vaccines that are not allowed in developed countries are imported to developing countries in order to reduce population growth. 5.3 Influencers Opinion leaders in anti-vaccination sentiment show varying characteristics across countries. However, they often appear to be well educated in alternative medicine. Some have no college education; others are in the medical field (such as nurses). A high level of volume and interaction can be recorded for influencers. They often subscribe to social channels of homeopaths and Page 24 alternative medicine advocates but they can be found across platforms. The following section lists a range of influencers that are active in different channels or languages: Name Position Facebook Fans Twitter Followers Blog Language Dr. Tennpen-ny The Voice of Reason about Vaccines 36,282 1,475 Yes English The Truth About Vac-cines Answering questions from concerned parents 21,246 N/A Yes English International Medical Council on Vaccination Purpose is to counter the messages asserted by pharmaceutical com-panies, the government and medical agencies that vaccines are safe, effective and harmless 7,983 N/A Yes English The Refusers "Vaccination choice is a fundamental human right." 9,069 12,457 Yes English Mothering Magazine Mothering is the pre-mier community for naturally minded par-ents. 66,504 102,173 Yes English Oglnopo-lskie Sto-warzyszenie Wiedzy o Szczepieniach STOP NOP Protest against new laws for mandatory vaccinations in Poland and against disinforma-tion campaigns about the effectiveness and safety of vaccines. 3,203 N/A Yes Polish STOP Pr-zymusowi Szczepie Petition campaign against new new laws for mandatory vaccina-tions in Poland. 2,866 58 Yes Polish Table 1: Examples of influencers in the anti-vaccination sentiment in social media. Page 25 With respect to the above-mentioned arguments, opinion leaders in the anti-vaccination movement put an emphasis on highlighting negative stories that focus on individual cases. In some cases, they blame outbreaks on shedding vaccinated children who get unvaccinated children sick. The argumentation is based on the conviction that vaccines are unsafe and dont work. A list of common arguments by arguments by influencers per language can be obtained in Appendix B. In this section the research question will be discussed in light of the theoretical and empirical findings. It needs to be noted that the discussion only focuses on engagement with anti-vaccination advocates in the four researched languages. This does not include pro-vaccination movements, medical professionals, partners or others. The discussion will propose a model that illustrates the different drivers of anti-vaccination sentiment based on three elements. The recommendations section builds on the three elements of the model and provides practical advice for communication strategies. 6.1 Discussion In order to develop engagement and messaging strategies for anti-vaccination sentiment, it is vital to have an abstract understanding of what drives users to become suspicious about vaccinations. Based on the findings, the paper proposes a model of anti-vaccination sentiment identification and salience. We classify three main spheres that attribute to a negative sentiment towards vaccine, which help us in the identification of trends within the anti-vaccination sentiment. The classification is illustrated in the following figure: DISCUSSION &RECOMMENDATIONS Page 26 The first attribute is the individual sphere. The main motivations for users to get involved are highly personal matters driven by concern and fear. When it comes to vaccinations, some parents are not sure what the right decision is. Am I a good mother if I do not get my child vaccinated or is it my responsibility as a caring parent to ensure the best protection for my child? Personal testimonies of other parents, especially negative stories, have a huge impact on the parent and fuel the concern. The second element that characterizes the anti-vaccination sentiment is the contextual sphere. The main driver behind the contextual sphere is a distrust of governments, pharmaceutical industry, scientific bodies and international organizations. It seems to be overwhelming for parents to understand the role of the big players. An interesting observation is that users in the contextual sphere do not seem to have a general resentment against vaccines per se but most arguments focus on lack of transparency in the decision processes as well as the potential conflict of interests trigger distrust. The third attribute is labeled as transcendental sphere. Negative attitudes towards vaccinations are derived from idealistic, religious and ethical beliefs. Arguments are rooted in strong beliefs and appear dogmatic, such as God creates us in the most ideal way or a body has its natural balance. Figure 7: Model of anti-vaccination sentiment identification and salience. Page 27 Individual, contextual and transcendental sphere are the key attributes of a member of the anti-vaccination movement. We argue that the various combinations of these attributes are indicators of the salience of members. We can identify four groups that derive from Figure 3. In order to understand salience within anti-vaccination community members, we propose the following classification Core Members are users that apply to all three spheres. They are concerned about side effects, distrust the government and live according to strong religious or ethical beliefs. Intense Members are members that apply to two of the three spheres. For example, a user might have concerns about vaccinations based on an individual sphere and also carry distrust against the pharmaceutical industry. But they are not driven by any idealistic beliefs. Alert Members are users that apply only to one of the three spheres. The doubt about vaccines derives only from one sphere and has human characteristics. They seem to be less convinced of the harm of vaccinations than the other two member groups. There is a fourth group of users, the Non-Members. They simply do not apply to any of the classification. We argue that Alert Members are easier to convince of the necessity of vaccines than Intense Members. Core Members are the hardest to convince, because the arguments against vaccines are based on various foundations. The findings also show that the intensity of argumentation, the interaction and the volume varies between the spheres. Therefore, the next section outlines practical recommendation on how to draft engagement strategies for each sphere. 6.2 Recommendations The following graphic summarizes the framework for the engagement and messaging plan that enables communication officers and health workers to react to the anti-vaccination sentiments. The framework is designed to be customizable for local realities. However, it does provide an overarching guidance for communication and campaigning initiatives. Members of the individual sphere should be approached with an emotional appeal. Users in this sphere go online and search for information in order to make an informed decision. Content that encourages parents to get their children vaccinated needs to be easy to find. Hence, search engine optimization plays an important role in the outreach strategy. Search marketing is used to gain visibility on search engines when users search for terms that relate to immunization. In order to appear on top if the search Page 28 results two general approaches should be considers: Organic search (SEO): When you immunization or vaccines into a search engine like Google or Yahoo!, vthe organic results are displayed in the main space of the results-page. For example, when parents search for information about vaccinations, pro-vaccine information should rank on top of the search engine results. By optimizing websites and posts, organizations and governments can improve the ranking for important search terms and phrases (keywords). Engaging actively in discussion and providing links to pro-vaccination content also helps to increase the visibility in the ranking. Paid search (SEM) enables to buy space in the sponsored area of a search engine. There are a variety of paid search programs, but the most common is called pay-per-click (PPC), meaning the information provider only pays for a listing when a user clicks the ad. The emphasis of the content strategy is to empower parents to ask doctors the right question in order to build confidence for the decision making process. Rather than criticising parents choices not to vaccinate, the messaging should promote an individuals ability to make the world a safer place for children. The communication strategy should also highlight the individual right and responsibility to choose to vaccinate. Through emotional Figure 8: Engagement Matrix for core spheres of the anti-vaccination movement. Page 29 messaging, hesitating parents should receive key information and explain how their choices affect their own children and the ones of others. The communities in the contextual sphere source their scepticism from general distrust against the large players involved in the vaccination industry. The engagement strategy should be based on a rational appeal that focuses on the hard facts of vaccines. It is important to avoid obvious communication tactics. Transparency about vaccines, testing, ingredients, potential side effects, funding and preventable diseases is crucial to reduce distrust. The messaging should also take into account past errors in vaccine campaigns by governments and suppliers in the regions and most importantly focus on the lessons learnt and how processes have been improving since then. Transparency can be built through a multi-channel approach that features the development of vaccines with expert testimonies. Successful cases, such as the near eradication of polio as a global effort, help to reduce distrust as well. This can be backed by official statistics on how infant mortality rates have been reduced over the past 20 years. Countries that generally have a favourable public perception, such as Scandinavian countries,
Article
18 Февраль 2022
Job aids on COVID-19 vaccines for healthcare workers
https://www.unicef.org/eca/job-aids-covid-19-vaccines-healthcare-workers
We have developed a set of job aids to help healthcare workers explain key facts about COVID-19 vaccines to their patients and have meaningful patient-centred conversations, boost vaccine confidence and support the patients in their decision-making process to get vaccinated against COVID-19. It primarily contains four sections: What does the…
Article
26 Апрель 2019
The undeniable power of vaccines
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/undeniable-power-vaccines
The rash doesn’t usually show up until several  days after the other symptoms – a cough, fever, and sore throat – but by this time, the virus has been in the body for nearly two weeks. Within hours, the rash will cover the body, and last another week. There is no cure for measles – it remains one of the most serious illnesses for children under age 5.  Since 2017, more than 100,000 people have contracted measles in Ukraine, with 15 deaths already in 2019 – six of them children. The outbreak has fuelled concerns over low vaccination rates in the country, caused by misinformation and a shortage of vaccines in previous years. Measles is extremely contagious; an estimated 90 per cent of unprotected people who come close to someone with measles will contract it, too.   [ABOVE]: Olena Kudryashova and her daughter, Maya, 17 months, walk outside their home in Kyiv. Both caught measles in 2018. Olena was infected first, before spreading the illness to her daughter. Today, Olena supports vaccination as early as possible. “Vaccination, like politics or religion, leaves no one indifferent,” she says. “But… there is no room for discussion in vaccination. It is absurd to deny its effectiveness.” Инна Онищенко, блогер Facebook, популярный среди молодых матерей в Украине. “It is easy to be an anti-vaccinator when you have no children,” admits Inna Onyshchenko, a Facebook blogger popular among mothers of young children in Ukraine. Before she was a mother, Inna spoke out against vaccination. When she became pregnant, she reconsidered. Today, her three-year-old daughter Zoryana has all of her vaccinations and Inna shares her experiences on her blog, dispelling common myths about immunization.  Светлана Овдий играет возле своего дома в пригороде Киева со своим трёхлетним сыном Кириллом. Svitlana Ovdiy plays with her son Kyrylo, 3, a tetanus survivor, near their house outside Kyiv. The infection put Kyrylo in a medically-induced coma, and he spent 50 days in the hospital. “When he heard my voice... he started crying, calling for help, but there was nothing more I could do,” Svitlana recalls. “Now vaccination is a top priority issue in our family.”  Ханна Прокопышин находится со своим девятилетним внуком Дмитрием в больнице, где он проходит лечение от бронхиальной астмы. Hanna Prokopyshyn sits with her grandson Dmytro, 9, in the hospital where he receives treatment for bronchial asthma. Dmytro’s parents initially were afraid to vaccinate their son due to his condition – a concern doctors dispelled, especially amid Ukraine’s measles outbreak. Dmytro has already successfully received the first dose of the MMR vaccine and his parents plan to follow the National Immunization Schedule. Сергей Олийнык, врач-педиатр, изображён на фото со своей годовалой дочерью Катей. Serhiy Oliynyk, a paediatrician, holds his daughter Katya, age 1, before setting off to work at Kosiv hospital in Western Ukraine. Serhiy promotes vaccines among his patients and recently had Katya inoculated against measles. Children should generally receive their first dose of the MMR vaccine at age 1; babies at high risk of contracting measles, especially during an outbreak, can receive the MMR shot as early as 6 months. Анна Кравчук, студентка медицинского университета, является одной из шести детей в своей семье. Anna Kravchuk, a university student and one of six children, did not get vaccinated until the measles outbreak in Ukraine reached her school. Many of Anna’s fellow students were infected – one died. After Anna got vaccinated, she convinced her mother to vaccinate her younger sisters. “I am sometimes being asked for medical advice,” she says. “And, of course, in the first year of study I am not a reliable adviser. But for immunization I know for sure – it just must be done. It is obligatory.” Марьяна Возница, главный врач Украинской специализированной детской больницы во Львове, изображена на фото в своём кабинете. “The problems with vaccination... result from the poor communication between doctors and and patients,” says Maryana Voznytsya, Head Doctor at the Ukrainian Specialized Children’s Hospital in Lviv. She adds that her hospital deals with the consequences of other doctors’ vaccination failures. In recent years, the hospital has received six tetanus cases, with many doctors facing the disease for the first time. “Everyone should know that doctors and patients are on the same side in the fight against diseases.”  Олесь Похраничный, директор частной школы во Львове, изображён на фото с одной из трёх своих дочерей. Oles Pohranychnyi, a private school director in Lviv, once believed the misconceptions surrounding vaccines – he and his wife decided not to vaccinate their three daughters. Increased risk of measles and other illnesses in Ukraine, such as tetanus and diphtheria, made them change their minds. “The National Education System should... give people confidence in vaccination and health services in general,” Oles says, holding his daughter. He now organizes UNICEF-supported vaccination training for parents and arranges inoculations for staff.  Медсестра Иванна Кныш на фото после вакцинации троих детей в Западной Украине. “The more openly we talk about vaccination, the more we'll be trusted by parents, because they realize that there's nothing to be afraid of,” says Ivanna Knysh, pictured after vaccinating three children in Western Ukraine. Until recently, Ivanna, a nurse, worked at a healthcare facility in Novoselytsya, a town in which 100 per cent of children were vaccinated thanks to her efforts. Now a UNICEF-certified vaccination trainer, Ivanna actively encourages doctors to help dispel parents’ fears by better explaining the procedure.   Игорь Сухомлин, ресторатор, изображён на фото вместе с женой и тремя детьми у своего ресторана в Киеве. After his middle son contracted chickenpox, Igor Sukhomlyn, a restaurateur and thought leader in Kyiv, was not willing to take any chances. He and his wife immediately vaccinated other members of the family from chickenpox, and no one else got sick. “Vaccination is a valuable scientific achievement,” says Igor, pictured with his wife and children in front of his restaurant.    This World Immunization Week, UNICEF and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation are launching a  new global campaign  to emphasize the power and safety of vaccines. From 24–31 April, the foundation will contribute US$1 to UNICEF for every like or share of a social media post using the hashtag #VaccinesWork, up to US$1 million. In the meantime, UNICEF will continue to assist Ukraine’s Ministry of Health in monitoring the outbreak, helping the Government procure free vaccines and spreading the message that together, communities can protect everyone through vaccines.   Learn more World Immunization Week UNICEF's work on immunization  in the region Vaccine FAQs Parents' most frequently asked questions about vaccines Vaccines and the diseases they prevent Vaccines and the diseases they prevent
Article
29 Апрель 2022
Amid war, Ukrainian mothers fight for a healthy future for children
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/amid-war-ukrainian-mothers-fight-healthy-future-children
Even war will not stop Hanna Omelchenko, a 30-year-old mother who fled Kyiv with her family, from getting her children vaccinated.  “I believe that vaccination is really the least we can do for our children,” she says. “Not so long ago, many children were dying from dangerous infections or suffering terrible consequences. Now medicine and science allow us to get protected.” image A few weeks ago, Hanna was cradling her twin sons in their basement as the shells pounded the ground above. Now, having found a safe place to stay in Uzhgorod, a city in western Ukraine, she is determined to give one-year-old Solomiya and Myron a shot at a healthy, peaceful future.  Yulia Dovhanych, who founded a medical center in Uzhgorod, is one of the doctors helping her to secure it. "War is not a reason to avoid vaccination,” says Yulia. “On the contrary, now all of us, both doctors and parents with children, need to be even more disciplined and take better care of our health.”   image Many Ukrainians like Hanna have found themselves far from home, without a family doctor. There are 50,000 internally displaced people in Uzhgorod alone. And, as the violence in Ukraine escalates, so too does the risk of infection outbreaks.  At the end of last year, an outbreak of polio was reported in the country’s Zakarpattia and Rivne regions, resulting in the paralysis of at least two children. Now, these regions are seeing the arrival of some of the highest numbers of internally displaced persons from across the country.   image Yulia, who has been working as a doctor for 11 years, knows all too well how crucial it is for children to be vaccinated.  “It is extremely important to protect children from polio, because there is no cure for this disease,” she says. “And it can have grave consequences, such as lifelong paralysis. Vaccination protects against such consequences and death from the disease." In Uzhgorod hundreds of displaced families have turned to local health facilities to get their children vaccinated. Some children will see a doctor for the first time, having been born only recently.  “I am glad that I found a medical center, where the children and I feel comfortable and where we get everything we need,” says Hanna. “I want to address Ukrainian mothers – vaccination is really the least you can do to protect your child. If you are not under fire and are safe, do not hesitate to vaccinate your children! All the barriers you may think of are nothing compared to the threats posed to your baby by infectious diseases.”   image "Everyone has their own fight now,” adds Yulia. “Our fight is against infectious diseases. It is a fight for health. There is no cure for polio. But there is a reliable protection – vaccination.” In the past months, millions of Ukrainian families have fled their homes and now face an uncertain future, meaning that thousands of children across the country are missing vital doses of vaccines to protect them from polio, measles, diphtheria and other life-threatening diseases. Before February 2022, a steady and measurable process has been achieved in revamping routine immunization rates to pre-pandemic levels.  Now, low immunization rates, coupled with an ongoing polio outbreak, limited access to hygiene, and overcrowded waiting and transit points in others, pose a serious threat of infectious diseases outbreaks in Ukraine.  UNICEF is providing ongoing support to the government of Ukraine and its national immunization program through training health professionals, helping to set up and maintain the vaccine cold chain system, launching communication and behavior change campaigns on the importance of vaccination, and combating misinformation about vaccines.  
Article
13 Май 2021
Mainstreaming what works: EU and UNICEF strengthen health capacity for refugee and migrant children
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/mainstreaming-what-works-eu-and-unicef-strengthen-health-capacity-refugee-and-migrant
“Very often we have the feeling that this space functions as a container for the absorption of negative emotions of the people who visit us. People who come here often feel safe enough to share their fears, their frustrations and even their darker thoughts. We try to give them space to express their feelings and we always find ways to boost their morale.”  A Coordinator from METAdrasi on the importance of the Mother and Child Space for refugee and migrant At the ADRA community centre for migrant mothers and babies, Belgrade, Serbia At the ADRA community centre for migrant mothers and babies, Belgrade, Serbia The ‘RM Child-Health’ initiative has worked with UNICEF and its partners over the past year to strengthen national health systems in five European countries so they can meet the needs of refugee and migrant children. The initiative recognizes that a strong health system delivers for every vulnerable child. It is also a system that looks beyond physical health care to address mental and emotional wellbeing and wider issues, such as gender-based violence. Strong health systems are vital to ease the bottlenecks that confront refugee and migrant families when they try to access health care. All too often, their attempts to claim their right to health services are hampered by language barriers, bureaucracy and discrimination. In Bulgaria, for example, where national immunization rates are already below the European average, refugee and migrant children are three times less likely to be vaccinated than other children. The challenges  Refugee and migrant children often have complex health needs, which may go far beyond poor physical health. Migration has a negative impact, for example, on their mental health and psychosocial wellbeing. And that impact is intensified by poor living conditions, a lack of supportive social networks and social integration and, all too often, hostility from host communities. Many parents and caregivers, faced with barriers to health care and other basic services, as well as a lack of control over their own destiny, face real distress, and this can undermine their ability to meet the physical and emotional needs of their children at a critical point in their development. Gender-based violence (GBV) is another – and particularly harsh – challenge that affects many refugee and migrant children and young people. A chronic lack of child-friendly health information and durable solutions has heightened the risks of GBV, sexually transmitted diseases and early pregnancies, and the devastating consequences of all three for mental health. The response 
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