Perez Samara, Tatar Ovidiu, Gilca Vladimir, Shapiro Gilla K, Ogilvie Gina, Guichon Juliet, Naz Anila, Rosberger Zeev
Department of Psychology, McGill University, 1205 Dr. Penfield Avenue, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1B1, Canada; Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, Jewish General Hospital, 4333 Cote Ste-Catherine Road, Montreal, Quebec H3T 1E4, Canada.
Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, Jewish General Hospital, 4333 Cote Ste-Catherine Road, Montreal, Quebec H3T 1E4, Canada.
Vaccine. 2017 Aug 24;35(36):4713-4721. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2017.07.043. Epub 2017 Jul 27.
HPV vaccination uptake in boys is suboptimal in many jurisdictions, particularly in the absence of publicly funded HPV vaccination programs. Parents represent key decision-makers of HPV vaccination and their HPV vaccine decision-making stage is influenced by multiple psychosocial determinants. Our objective was to assess the relationship between a broad range of psychosocial factors and parents of boys' HPV vaccine decision-making stage.
Data were collected through an online survey from a nationally representative sample of Canadian parents of boys in February (T1) and November 2014 (T2). We assessed a broad number of psychosocial factors including: socio-demographics, health behaviours and validated scales for assessing HPV knowledge, attitudes and beliefs. Parents selected their HPV vaccination adoption stage based on the Precaution Adoption Process Model (PAPM). Multinomial logistic regression was used to test the association between predictors and PAPM stage at T1 and T2.
Discussion with a healthcare provider about the HPV vaccine and increased HPV knowledge was associated with increased odds of being in the more advanced PAPM stages. Increased perception of risks in the absence of HPV vaccination, increased perception that others endorse HPV vaccination and positive attitudes related to vaccines in general were associated with increased odds of being in the decided to vaccinate stage. Believing that HPV vaccination is harmful increased, and perceiving the benefits of HPV vaccination decreased the odds of deciding not to vaccinate.
This study highlights the psychosocial predictors of the decision-making stage reported by parents regarding HPV vaccination of their sons, that were significant at two time-points. Targeted interventions that consider the impact of the health care provider and address knowledge gaps as well as individual beliefs about benefits, risks, and harms of the HPV vaccine and vaccines in general should be implemented to help parents make better informed decisions that is, to move closer to actual vaccination adoption.
在许多司法管辖区,男孩的人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种率并不理想,尤其是在没有公共资助的HPV疫苗接种计划的情况下。父母是HPV疫苗接种的关键决策者,他们的HPV疫苗决策阶段受到多种社会心理因素的影响。我们的目的是评估一系列广泛的社会心理因素与男孩父母HPV疫苗决策阶段之间的关系。
2014年2月(T1)和11月(T2),通过在线调查从加拿大男孩父母的全国代表性样本中收集数据。我们评估了大量社会心理因素,包括:社会人口统计学、健康行为以及用于评估HPV知识、态度和信念的有效量表。父母根据预防采纳过程模型(PAPM)选择他们的HPV疫苗接种采纳阶段。采用多项逻辑回归来检验T1和T2时预测因素与PAPM阶段之间的关联。
与医疗保健提供者就HPV疫苗进行讨论以及HPV知识的增加与处于更高级PAPM阶段的几率增加相关。在未接种HPV疫苗的情况下对风险的感知增加、认为其他人认可HPV疫苗接种的感知增加以及总体上对疫苗的积极态度与处于决定接种阶段的几率增加相关。认为HPV疫苗有害的观念增加,以及对HPV疫苗接种益处的感知降低了决定不接种的几率。
本研究突出了父母报告的关于其儿子HPV疫苗接种决策阶段的社会心理预测因素,这些因素在两个时间点都具有显著性。应实施有针对性的干预措施,考虑医疗保健提供者的影响,解决知识差距以及个人对HPV疫苗和一般疫苗的益处、风险和危害的信念,以帮助父母做出更明智的决策,即更接近实际接种疫苗。