vaccine hesitancy reflection
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School
South Dakota State University *
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Course
335
Subject
Medicine
Date
Apr 3, 2024
Type
docx
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1
Uploaded by MajorMusic2584
Reflect on ways you can actively build a vaccine conversation in your future day-to-day practice. An example could be: discussing the HPV vaccine with all female patients seeing you for birth control.
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Discussing vaccines with the parents of all children that are of the age to be receiving vaccinations.
How might you build and memorize a few presumptive statements around vaccination? Can you make it your own and customize it based on the patient and the setting?
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It could help you to try to use cues when building and memorizing your presumptive statements. This could be like, when the patient says this, I am going to know to use my statement. I think you could definitely make your own presumptive statement and customize it to the patient and setting.
Reflect on how you could use the PrOTeCT framework in a clinical setting. Review the stages of the PrOTeCT Framework?
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You can use the PrOTeCT framework to help approach conversations about vaccines to achieve a positive outcome. The PrOTeCT model includes proactively starting the conversation with a presumptive statement, offering to share knowledge about the vaccine, tailoring your recommendation to their health concerns, addressing concerns, and talking through a specific plan to get the vaccine.
Think of the vaccine conversation elements you just practiced, and which ones can be applied to other preventative behaviours or measures?
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This could also be applied to scheduling appointments of patients with chronic diseases, and it could be used with parents that have children. Presumptive statements could also be used when caring for a patient in a hospital to get them to willingly do something that will benefit them.
What self-regulation strategies can you put in place to set yourself up for success in both personal and professional interactions that might incur some moral distress for you?
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Making sure to always put the best interest of the patient
first, rather than your wants and needs. Respecting patients of different cultures, religions, and ethnicities even if you don’t agree.
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