Mothers' Knowledge and Perceptions
Cross-source consensus on Mothers' Knowledge and Perceptions from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
How it works
Highlighted claims
- Some mothers misunderstood immunisation as treatment for sick children rather than prevention for healthy children. — Determinants of untimely receipt and non-receipt of routine childhood immunisation in Ebonyi state based on the Adapted Omale INDEPT FORCIS Framework and recommendations for policy and practice: a qualitative study
- Some mothers delayed or avoided immunisation because they did not view childhood illnesses as consistently severe or fatal. — Determinants of untimely receipt and non-receipt of routine childhood immunisation in Ebonyi state based on the Adapted Omale INDEPT FORCIS Framework and recommendations for policy and practice: a qualitative study
- Some mothers thought one to three vaccination visits were enough to protect a child against all vaccine-preventable diseases. — Determinants of untimely receipt and non-receipt of routine childhood immunisation in Ebonyi state based on the Adapted Omale INDEPT FORCIS Framework and recommendations for policy and practice: a qualitative study
- Some mothers believed only familiar vaccines were needed because they associated them with well-known diseases such as tuberculosis, measles, and yellow fever. — Determinants of untimely receipt and non-receipt of routine childhood immunisation in Ebonyi state based on the Adapted Omale INDEPT FORCIS Framework and recommendations for policy and practice: a qualitative study