E
Emilie Karafillakis
Researcher at University of London
Publications - 31
Citations - 2553
Emilie Karafillakis is an academic researcher from University of London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vaccination & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 24 publications receiving 1389 citations. Previous affiliations of Emilie Karafillakis include Imperial College London & Umeå University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The pandemic of social media panic travels faster than the COVID-19 outbreak.
Anneliese Depoux,Anneliese Depoux,Sam Martin,Sam Martin,Emilie Karafillakis,Emilie Karafillakis,Raman Preet,Raman Preet,Annelies Wilder-Smith,Annelies Wilder-Smith,Heidi J. Larson,Heidi J. Larson +11 more
TL;DR: The creation of an interactive platform and dashboard to provide real-time alerts of rumours and concerns about coronavirus spreading globally would enable public health officials and relevant stakeholders to respond rapidly with a proactive and engaging narrative that can mitigate misinformation.
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Mapping global trends in vaccine confidence and investigating barriers to vaccine uptake: a large-scale retrospective temporal modelling study
Alexandre de Figueiredo,Alexandre de Figueiredo,Clarissa Simas,Emilie Karafillakis,Pauline Paterson,Heidi J. Larson,Heidi J. Larson,Heidi J. Larson +7 more
TL;DR: The largest study of global vaccine confidence to date, allowing for cross-country comparisons and changes over time, finds that confidence in the importance, safety, and effectiveness of vaccines fell in Afghanistan, Indonesia, Pakistan, the Philippines, and South Korea.
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Vaccine hesitancy among healthcare workers in Europe: A qualitative study.
Emilie Karafillakis,Irina Dinca,Franklin Apfel,Sabrina Cecconi,Andrea Wűrz,Judit Takács,Jonathan E. Suk,Lucia Pastore Celentano,Piotr Kramarz,Heidi J. Larson,Heidi J. Larson +10 more
TL;DR: The results revealed that vaccine hesitancy is present in all four countries among vaccine providers and the most important concern across all countries was the fear of vaccine side effects.
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The benefit of the doubt or doubts over benefits? A systematic literature review of perceived risks of vaccines in European populations.
TL;DR: It is confirmed that individuals have many safety concerns about vaccination and often believe that the risks of vaccination outweigh their benefits, and strategies to better inform public perceptions of vaccines should include the provision of unbiased, comprehensive information tailored to population information needs.
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HPV vaccination in a context of public mistrust and uncertainty: a systematic literature review of determinants of HPV vaccine hesitancy in Europe
Emilie Karafillakis,Clarissa Simas,Caitlin Jarrett,Pierre Verger,Patrick Peretti-Watel,Fadia Dib,Stefania De Angelis,Judit Takács,Karam Adel Ali,Lucia Pastore Celentano,Heidi J. Larson +10 more
TL;DR: Comparative analyses indicated that confidence determinants differed by country and population groups, which supports the need to develop context-specific interventions to improve confidence in HPV vaccination and design community engagement strategies aiming to build public trust.