A Needs-Based Analysis of Teaching on Vaccinations and COVID-19 in German Medical Schools

Vaccines (Basel). 2022 Jun 19;10(6):975. doi: 10.3390/vaccines10060975.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic highlights the need for improving public confidence in vaccines. Academic gaps and redundancies on vaccinations must be identified to revise the medical curriculum for up-to-date training of medical students. This cross-sectional survey assessed the status of vaccine-related teaching in general and specific to COVID-19 in medical schools across Germany. A total of 4313 medical students completed a questionnaire comprising items on national learning goals and perceived needs for teaching on vaccinations. Mixed methods were used to analyse data quantitatively for relative frequencies (%) and correlations between teaching items and semesters (Spearman’s rho), and qualitatively (content analysis). Our findings showed that 38.92% of the students were dissatisfied with teaching on vaccine-preventable diseases, but the perceived satisfaction increased in later semesters (r = 0.46, p < 0.001). Moreover, 75.84% and 68.15% of the students were dissatisfied with teaching related to vaccine scepticism and vaccine-related communication strategies, respectively. Furthermore, 63.79% reported dissatisfaction with teaching on COVID-19 disease and 72.93% with teaching on COVID-19 vaccines. A total of 79.12% stated they educated others on COVID-19 and its vaccines and 75.14% felt responsible to do so. A majority of the medical students were dissatisfied with teaching on dealing with vaccine scepticism, communication strategies and COVID-19 vaccines. We recommend practice-oriented vaccine education, especially for teaching communication skills to medical students.

Keywords: COVID-19; communication; curriculum mapping; medical curriculum; teaching; vaccination; vaccine education; vaccine hesitancy; vaccine scepticism; vaccines.

Grants and funding

The study was funded in part through the Going Viral project of the Heidelberg University Medical Faculty. For the publication fee, we acknowledge partial financial support by Heidelberg University and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under the funding program “Open Access Publication costs”. Franziska Baessler is supported under the Olympia-Morata fellowship programme of the Heidelberg University Medical Faculty.