Skip to main content
. 2021 Mar 22;21:566. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-10563-9

Table 2.

Expected consequences of the mandate and correlation with attitude towards mandates for pediatricians vs. others

Expected consequences of mandate Mean (SD)a Correlationb with attitude towards mandatesc
Pediatricians Other physicians p-value Pediatricians Other physicians
I expect no consequences. 2.97 (1.29) 3.16 (1.33) 0.014 0.11 0.09
Counseling patients will require more effort. 3.01 (1.13) 3.23 (1.09) 0.001 −0.16 − 0.15
Counseling patients will require less effort. 2.01 (0.96) 1.94 (0.87) 0.203 0.17 0.12
The mandate will be a burden for the patient provider relationship. 2.11 (0.95) 1.98 (0.97) 0.018 −0.34 − 0.35
I expect a higher amount of work for issuing certificates about measles protection to patients. 2.47 (1.12) 2.33 (1.00) 0.017 −0.19 −0.24
I expect that patients will press me to issue medical exemptions from the mandate. 3.38 (1.24) 3.16 (1.26) 0.003 −0.04 −0.19
I expect more children to be vaccinated on time. 3.47 (1.06) 3.93 (0.90) < 0.001 0.25 0.35

Bold denotes significance at p < 0.05.

aLikert scale items (1 = disagree; 5 = strongly agree)

bPearson’s method

cMean score ‘attitude towards mandates’ consisting of four items (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.88) expressing negative attitude (score = 1) to positive attitude (score = 5)