Brewer Noel T, Hall Megan E, Malo Teri L, Gilkey Melissa B, Quinn Beth, Lathren Christine
Department of Health Behavior, Gillings School of Global Public Health, and
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Pediatrics. 2017 Jan;139(1). doi: 10.1542/peds.2016-1764. Epub 2016 Dec 5.
Improving provider recommendations is critical to addressing low human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination coverage. Thus, we sought to determine the effectiveness of training providers to improve their recommendations using either presumptive "announcements" or participatory "conversations."
In 2015, we conducted a parallel-group randomized clinical trial with 30 pediatric and family medicine clinics in central North Carolina. We randomized clinics to receive no training (control), announcement training, or conversation training. Announcements are brief statements that assume parents are ready to vaccinate, whereas conversations engage parents in open-ended discussions. A physician led the 1-hour, in-clinic training. The North Carolina Immunization Registry provided data on the primary trial outcome: 6-month coverage change in HPV vaccine initiation (≥1 dose) for adolescents aged 11 or 12 years.
The immunization registry attributed 17 173 adolescents aged 11 or 12 to the 29 clinics still open at 6-months posttraining. Six-month increases in HPV vaccination coverage were larger for patients in clinics that received announcement training versus those in control clinics (5.4% difference, 95% confidence interval: 1.1%-9.7%). Stratified analyses showed increases for both girls (4.6% difference) and boys (6.2% difference). Patients in clinics receiving conversation training did not differ from those in control clinics with respect to changes in HPV vaccination coverage. Neither training was effective for changing coverage for other vaccination outcomes or for adolescents aged 13 through 17 (n = 37 796).
Training providers to use announcements resulted in a clinically meaningful increase in HPV vaccine initiation among young adolescents.
改进医疗服务提供者的建议对于提高人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种覆盖率至关重要。因此,我们试图确定培训医疗服务提供者以使用推定的“告知”或参与性的“对话”来改进其建议的有效性。
2015年,我们在北卡罗来纳州中部的30家儿科和家庭医学诊所进行了一项平行组随机临床试验。我们将诊所随机分为不接受培训(对照组)、接受告知培训或接受对话培训。告知是假设父母准备好接种疫苗的简短陈述,而对话则让父母参与开放式讨论。一名医生进行了为期1小时的诊所内培训。北卡罗来纳州免疫登记处提供了关于主要试验结果的数据:11或12岁青少年HPV疫苗起始接种(≥1剂)的6个月覆盖率变化。
免疫登记处将17173名11或12岁青少年归因于培训后6个月仍营业的29家诊所。接受告知培训的诊所患者的HPV疫苗接种覆盖率6个月的增加幅度大于对照组诊所患者(差异为5.4%,95%置信区间:1.1%-9.7%)。分层分析显示女孩(差异为4.6%)和男孩(差异为6.2%)的覆盖率均有所增加。接受对话培训的诊所患者在HPV疫苗接种覆盖率变化方面与对照组诊所患者没有差异。两种培训对于改变其他疫苗接种结果的覆盖率或对13至17岁青少年(n = 37796)均无效。
培训医疗服务提供者使用告知导致青少年HPV疫苗起始接种率有临床意义的增加。