1 Lecturer in Sociology and Communications, School of Social Sciences, Brunel University Middlesex UB8 3PH, UK
2 Consultant in Public Health, Department of Primary Care and Social Medicine, Imperial College Faculty of Medicine London W6 8RP, UK
3 Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Public Health and Policy Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Keppel Street, London W1, UK
Correspondence: Dr Lesley Henderson lesley.henderson{at}brunel.ac.uk
| SUMMARY |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Design Qualitative interviews with 25 orthodox Jewish mothers and 10 local health care workers.
Setting The orthodox Jewish community in North East London.
Main outcome measures Identification of views on immunization in the orthodox Jewish community.
Results In a community assumed to be relatively insulated from direct media influence, word of mouth is nevertheless a potent source of rumours about vaccination dangers. The origins of these may lie in media scares that contribute to anxieties about MMR. At the same time, close community cohesion leads to a sense of relative safety in relation to tuberculosis, with consequent low rates of BCG uptake. Thus low uptake of different immunizations arises from enhanced feelings of both safety and danger. Low uptake was not found to be due to the practical difficulties associated with large families, or to perceived insensitive cultural practices of health care providers.
Conclusions The views and practices of members of this community are not homogeneous and may change over time. It is important that assumptions concerning the role of religious beliefs do not act as an obstacle for providing clear messages concerning immunization, and community norms may be challenged by explicitly using its social networks to communicate more positive messages about immunization. The study provides a useful example of how social networks may reinforce or challenge misinformation about health and risk and the complex nature of decision making about children's health.
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Lower rates of childhood immunization have been found amongst disadvantaged communities3–5 and within certain minority ethnic communities where uptake of preventive health programmes has traditionally been low.6,7 In the City and Hackney area of east London there are exceptionally low rates of immunization amongst the orthodox Jewish community (46% for both diphtheria and MMR), in spite of relatively high rates (80 and 90%) for other ethnic groups in the area and an overall rate of 70% of children aged two being immunized for MMR8 ( Figure 1).
|
Our study investigates whether there are specific religious or ethnic reasons for low uptake of immunization amongst orthodox Jewish families in North East London and explores perceptions of barriers such as larger family size, the role of local health care services, and the significance of wider sources such as local and national media reporting.
| Setting |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Good health is regarded extremely highly and it is considered to be a religious obligation to seek medical attention when ill.16 It is not uncommon for serious illnesses to be concealed, particularly hereditary, chronic or mental illness. There are many diverse voluntary groups within the community which provide health and social care services. While local statutory health services are used in times of illness, or where there is a need for hospitalization (particularly maternity), the use of complementary health care facilities and practitioners is growing in popularity. Some health promotion activities are not considered appropriate, such as inviting unmarried women to participate in cervical screening.17
| Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Preliminary background interviews were conducted with ten health care staff who had significant contact with the community through local GP practices and who were either responsible for implementing immunization programmes or may be expected to give advice on this to orthodox Jewish mothers. These included five outreach workers with specific links to the community (e.g. responsible for support in areas including nutrition, mental health, family support and baby clinic); one health visitor; one GP, one Practice Manager; one Practice Nurse; and one receptionist. Members of the research team also met with local Rabbis and discussed the study with GPs and health related community workers to secure approval from religious leaders and to develop a culturally appropriate research design. Ethical approval was awarded by the North East London and The City Research Ethics Sub Committee and the Ethics Committee for the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Off Site Hazard and Risk Assessments were completed for the interviewers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
Semi-structured interviews with orthodox Jewish mothers commenced in May 2003. These were conducted by two female interviewers, as most women were breastfeeding and unable to initiate this in mixed company. It was also important that interviewers were able to build rapport with the participants. For logistical reasons interviews took place in participants' homes – this was easier for the participants, who were commonly looking after more than one pre-school child at home – and a male interviewer could have been an intrusive presence. Interviews were scheduled in line with the religious calendar. Our interview protocol was designed to first collect demographic details, second to explore decisions concerning general health issues, and third to examine beliefs and behaviour concerning immunization ( Table 1). The interview sessions lasted between 25 and 90 minutes and were, with permission, audio-recorded and transcribed fully.
|
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
I just feel that maybe some health visitors should be taught more about Jewish people... make them more aware that we're not offish, we're just very busy. (participant 18)
Health professionals were sometimes praised for their sensitive and supportive role:
I have a good relationship with my health visitor who is a blessing. You know cause I suffer from manic depression after childbirth so she keeps on visiting me. She's ever so nice, she's really helped me. She does more than her job. She spends a lot of time with me and I appreciate it. (participant 2)
Social networks and media influence
It was clear from comments made by both mothers and local health care staff that advice circulated through informal social networks. It appeared that the importance of this was related to the community's relative lack of exposure to mass media sources ( Table 2). Nevertheless, controversies originating in the mass media reached and circulated through these networks, creating anxieties about certain vaccines, thus suggesting only a partial insulation of the community from external influence. Some participants were clearly in more direct touch with the themes of current scares than others, suggested by the following contrasting comments:
There is always an anxiety... maybe through bad publicity. You hear little bits of information here and there and it plays on your mind... You know "why didn't Tony Blair give his last one the immunization?"(participant 8)
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
Table 2. Informal networks
This [child] hasn't had the MMR yet, the youngest, because of all the scares. The other two [children] had everything. (participant 18)
I'm hearing so many different things about [the MMR] that I just don't know... there's so much about autism and all these horrible things and measles, mumps and rubella aren't really deathly diseases. I'm kind of leaning towards not doing it. (participant 16)
Some people have told me that they have caught cancer, I don't know if that is true or not, they say from the immunization of MMR. (participant 12)
Safety
The separation of the community from outside influence led to feelings of safety about tuberculosis and therefore a lack of need for the BCG vaccination, a situation that local health care providers occasionally supported, although this was not done consistently. It was clear that non-uptake of BCG was a long-standing practice in the community, to the extent that it was accorded thestatus of a Jewish belief ( Table 3).
|
In my head it's like this. I have a healthy child and an immunization is a disease. I am putting the disease in the child. Who knows how good this immunization is? You know all the stories about immunizations and there are bad batches. (participant 17)
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
Table 4. Adverse effects of immunizations (MMR and pertussis)
(The belief is that) with immunization you have a healthy child and then you're injecting a foreign something that could change that child. That's what happens with the immunizations. With the other health issues, exercise and... nothing's going to happen to them if they do exercise, or go swimming or... you know what I mean? (Key informant 1, outreach worker)
In the face of such threats, religiously inspired fatalism played an important part in supporting a decision not to immunize:
When you don't know what to do, when there's a risk involved both ways, then there's no need to put yourself in the danger of doing one of them. By not doing it (we) trust that God will help you out of these things. (participant 13)
I feel that if God wants her to get it [an illness] she will get it. (participant 4)
Most participants (23 of 25), when asked what came to mind when they heard the term MMR, linked it with such fears. Two women, though, did not associate this with anxiety and in fact perceived MMR as a routine immunization which they – and, crucially, others in their social networks – gave to their children:
Nothing in particular (comes to mind). I knew I had to do it so I just did it. (participant 2)
Everybody gives it. I've never really worried about (it). I'm happy to give them. Why should (children) suffer basically? If there's something to prevent that? That's basically my decision why I did it... All my friends went and all my sisters (to the clinic for immunizations). It doesn't take long, it doesn't cost any money and why not? (participant 1)
These two cases are important because they exemplify that different social norms exist within the same community. Social networks may therefore act as a support or deterrent to immunization for some women.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The study identified that individuals in this community have a range of views on these matters. Changes in attitudes over time appear to have occurred, with many families having partially immunized their children, perhaps holding back with younger ones in the light of currently raised levels of anxiety. Additionally, the two cases where women not only immunized their children routinely but also believed that others in their immediate networks did so are of particular interest. Such variability suggests that efforts by local health care providers to influence members of the community, perhaps by feeding positive stories of the benefits of immunization into the informal system for circulating rumour, may be influential.
Strengths and weaknesses of the study
Our sampling from this difficult-to-reach population may be more likely to contain individuals open to contact with outsiders, something that may be associated with a greater willingness to immunize. In the light of this, the finding that anxieties about MMR were so common is all the more remarkable. The explanations provided by these interviewees for their own behaviour are likely to be helpful in understanding the views of others in the community who did not participate in the study. We were also unable to access those who do not receive Western medicine due to our recruitment from general practices. This is a problem which has been noted in other studies of ethnic minority groups and health beliefs,23 although recent studies have suggested that complementary medicine is not necessarily considered to be an alternative to immunization.24
Implications for clinicians and policy makers
Our findings suggest that it is important to monitor the views and practices of this community over time as these do not remain static. In turn, a better understanding of how and why they change will provide beneficial leads in identifying how health providers may make culturally sensitive interventions. It may be possible to challenge community norms by explicitly using its existing social networks to communicate more positive messages about immunization, though it is important to recognize that this group have information networks that span several countries, including the USA and Israel. During the period May to 18 July 2007 there were a total of 39 cases of measles in Hackney, most of these involving children from the orthodox Jewish community.24 Outbreaks of measles in orthodox Jewish communities in Jerusalem were most likely to involve unvaccinated children, prompting calls for special attention to specific sub-populations.25 Investigations of how different socially situated groups receive and process health information will yield benefits for minority communities and the wider population.
| Footnotes |
|---|
DECLARATIONS
Competing interests None declaredFunding This study was funded by City and Hackney Teaching Primary Care Trust and held at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Ethical approval Granted by North East London & The City Research Ethics Sub Committee and the Ethics Committee for the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. In addition to this we completed off-site hazard and risk assessments for Lesley Henderson and Tamar Sutton who conducted the interviews
Guarantor LH
Contributorship LH participated in the design of the study, collected and analysed data and led in the writing of this paper. CM and NT participated in the design of the study, analysed data and participated in writing the paper
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
NHS Immunisation Statistics, England: 2003/04. http://www.dh.gov.uk/assetRoot/04/09/95/77/04099577.pdf.
Marsh, GN, Channing, DM. Comparison in use of health services between a deprived and an endowed community. Arch Dis Child 1987; 62: 392–6.[Abstract]
Jarman, B, Bosanquet, N, Rice, P, Dollimore, N, Leese, B. Uptake of immunisation in district health authorities in England. BMJ (Clin Res Ed) 1988; 296: 1775–8.[Medline]
Feder, GS, Vaclavik, T, Streetly, A. Traveller Gypsies and childhood immunization: a study in east London. Br J Gen Pract 1993; 43: 281–4.[Medline]
Baker, MR, Bandaranayake, R, Schweiger, MS. Differences in rate of uptake of immunisation among ethnic groups. BMJ (Clin Res Ed) 1984; 288: 1075–8.[Medline]
Bhopal, RS, Samim, AK. Immunization uptake of Glasgow Asian children: paradoxical benefit of communication barriers? Community Med 1988; 10: 215–20.[Medline]
City & Hackney Primary Care Trust. Regional Interactive Health System 2002.
Cuninghame, CJ, Charlton, CP, Jenkins, SM. Immunization uptake and parental perceptions in a strictly orthodox Jewish community in north-east London. J Public Health Med 1994; 16: 314–7.
Loewenthal, KM, Bradley, C. Immunization uptake and doctor's perceptions of uptake in a minority group: implications for interventions. Psychol Health Med 1996; 1: 223–30.
Abbott, S. Health Visiting and the Orthodox Jewish Community, Report for City and Hackney Primary Care Trust 2002 London: CHPCT.
Abbott, S. Lay and professional views on health visiting in an orthodox Jewish community. Br J Community Nurs 2004; 9: 80–5.[Medline]
Bellaby, P. Communication and miscommunication of risk: understanding UK parents' attitudes to combined MMR vaccination. BMJ 2003; 327: 725–8.
UK 2001 Census. www.statistics.gov.uk/census2001.
Spitzer, J, Hennessy, E, Neville, L. High group A streptococcal carriage in the orthodox Jewish community of North Hackney. Br J Gen Pract 2001; 51: 101–5.[Medline]
Dosani, S. Caring for Jewish Patients. BMJ 2003; 327: 169.
Purdy, S, Jones, KP, Sherratt, M, Fallon, PV. Demographic characteristics and primary health care utilization patterns of strictly orthodox Jewish and non-Jewish patients. Fam Pract 2000; 17: 233–5.
Arber, S, N Gilbert,ed. Designing samples Researching social life 1993 London: Sage pp.68–92.
Lawton, J, Naureen, A, Hallowell, N, Hanna, L, Douglas, M. Perceptions and experiences of taking oral hypoglycaemic agents among people of Pakistani and Indian origin: qualitative study. BMJ 2005; 330: 1247.
Green, J. Grounded theory and constant comparative method. BMJ 1998; 316: 1064–5.[Medline]
Green, J, Thorogood, N. Qualitative Methods for Health Research 2004 London: Sage.
Greenhalgh, T, Helman, C, Chowdhury, M. Health Beliefs and folk models of diabetes in British Bangladeshis: a qualitative study. BMJ 1998; 316: 978–83.
Smailbegovic, M, Laing, G, Bedford, H. Why do parents decide against immunization? The effect of health beliefs and health professionals. Child Care Health Dev 2003; 29: 303–11.[Medline]
City and Hackney Teaching Primary Care Trust. Update on Measles Outbreak in Hackney, City and Hackney Teaching Primary Care Trust, Press Information 2007 July 18, London: CHPCT.
Stein- Zamir, C, Zentner, G, Abramson, N et al. Measles outbreaks affecting children in Jewish ultra-orthodox communities in Jerusalem. Epidemiol Infect 2008; 136: 207–14.[Medline]
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||