» Articles » PMID: 18608068

HIV Vaccine Acceptability Among Immigrant Thai Residents in Los Angeles: a Mixed-method Approach

Overview
Journal AIDS Care
Publisher Informa Healthcare
Date 2008 Jul 9
PMID 18608068
Citations 13
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This study examined HIV vaccine acceptability among immigrant Thai residents in Los Angeles, California. We combined a qualitative research method (focus groups) with an innovative market research method (conjoint analysis). Focus groups explored social issues, concerns, barriers and motivators associated with HIV vaccine acceptability. Conjoint analysis was used to assess preferences among eight hypothetical HIV vaccines with varying attribute profiles and the impact of various attributes on acceptability. Five main themes were identified in the focus groups regarding acceptance and utilization of preventive HIV vaccines: (1) vaccine characteristics, such as efficacy, physical side-effects and cost, (2) fear of a vaccine, (3) vaccine acceptability and optimism, (4) social and family responses and (5) behavioral disinhibition. Conjoint analysis revealed HIV vaccine acceptability ranging from 7.4 (SD = 19.4) to 85.2 (SD = 24.3) across eight hypothetical vaccines. The vaccine with the highest acceptability had the following attributes: 99% efficacy, no side-effects, 10 years of protection, protects against one sub-type, free, one dose and given by injection. Vaccine efficacy had the greatest impact on acceptability (51.4, p=.005), followed by side-effects (11.1, p=.005) and duration of protection (8.3, p=.005). Despite some apprehensions and concerns, Thai residents perceived an HIV vaccine as making an important contribution to society and to protecting oneself and one's family from HIV infection. Nevertheless, acceptability of a partially efficacious vaccine may be low, suggesting the need for tailored social marketing interventions that might emphasize a collectivistic rather than an individualistic focus. Assessing HIV vaccine acceptability using a mixed-method approach is feasible with Thai residents and should lend itself to HIV vaccine research with other Asian Pacific Islander populations in the US.

Citing Articles

Acceptability of HPV vaccination for cervical cancer prevention amongst emerging adult women in rural Mysore, India: a mixed-methods study.

Coursey K, Muralidhar K, Srinivas V, Jaykrishna P, Begum F, Ningaiah N BMC Public Health. 2024; 24(1):2139.

PMID: 39112938 PMC: 11304586. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-024-19485-8.


Health Economics Research on Non-surgical Biomedical HIV Prevention: Identifying Gaps and Proposing a Way Forward.

Torres-Rueda S, Terris-Prestholt F, Gafos M, Indravudh P, Giddings R, Bozzani F Pharmacoeconomics. 2023; 41(7):787-802.

PMID: 36905570 PMC: 10007656. DOI: 10.1007/s40273-022-01231-w.


Eliciting Preferences for HIV Prevention Technologies: A Systematic Review.

Beckham S, Crossnohere N, Gross M, Bridges J Patient. 2020; 14(2):151-174.

PMID: 33319339 PMC: 7884379. DOI: 10.1007/s40271-020-00486-9.


Stated-preference research in HIV: A scoping review.

Humphrey J, Naanyu V, MacDonald K, Wools-Kaloustian K, Zimet G PLoS One. 2019; 14(10):e0224566.

PMID: 31665153 PMC: 6821403. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224566.


Young men who have sex with men's awareness, acceptability, and willingness to participate in HIV vaccine trials: Results from a nationwide online pilot study.

Connochie D, Tingler R, Bauermeister J Vaccine. 2019; 37(43):6494-6499.

PMID: 31522806 PMC: 6764873. DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.08.076.


References
1.
Strauss R, Sengupta S, Kegeles S, MClellan E, Metzger D, Eyre S . Willingness to volunteer in future preventive HIV vaccine trials: issues and perspectives from three U.S. communities. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2001; 26(1):63-71. DOI: 10.1097/00126334-200101010-00010. View

2.
Newman P, Duan N, Lee S, Rudy E, Seiden D, Kakinami L . HIV vaccine acceptability among communities at risk: the impact of vaccine characteristics. Vaccine. 2005; 24(12):2094-101. PMC: 2819665. DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2005.11.013. View

3.
Ryan M, McIntosh E, Shackley P . Methodological issues in the application of conjoint analysis in health care. Health Econ. 1998; 7(4):373-8. DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1099-1050(199806)7:4<373::aid-hec348>3.0.co;2-j. View

4.
Horan P, DiClemente R . HIV knowledge, communication, and risk behaviors among white, Chinese-, and Filipino-American adolescents in a high-prevalence AIDS epicenter: a comparative analysis. Ethn Dis. 1993; 3(2):97-105. View

5.
Kittikorn N, Street A, Blackford J . Managing shame and stigma: case studies of female carers of people with AIDS in southern Thailand. Qual Health Res. 2006; 16(9):1286-301. DOI: 10.1177/1049732306293992. View