Department of Human Studies, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1720 2nd Ave S., EB 207, Birmingham, AL 35294-1250, United States.
Department of Human Studies, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1720 2nd Ave S., EB 207, Birmingham, AL 35294-1250, United States.
Gynecol Oncol. 2018 Jun;149(3):506-512. doi: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2018.03.047. Epub 2018 Mar 24.
The cervical cancer disparity continues to exist and has widened between Black and non-Hispanic White women. Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines could potentially reduce this disparity, yet remain underused among Black female adolescents. We investigated psychosocial and cultural factors associated with Black mothers' intentions to vaccinate their daughters against HPV, and explored views toward a HPV vaccine mandate.
In this quantitative dominant, mixed methods study, cross sectional surveys (n=237) and follow-up semi-structured interviews (n=9) were conducted with Black mothers of daughters. A 2-step logistic regression determined factors associated with Black mothers' intention. Thematic content analysis determined emerging themes.
Perceived susceptibility (p=.044), perceived barriers (p<.001), and subjective norms (p=.001) were significant predictors of maternal HPV vaccination intentions. Follow-up interviews provided insight into factors influencing mothers' intentions. Mothers with low intentions did not perceive their daughter to be currently sexually active or in near future, thus, not at HPV risk. Pediatricians were identified as the most influential person on maternal decision-making if there was a pre-existing relationship. However, many mothers had not received a pediatricians' recommendation for their daughters. Barriers influencing mother's decision-making include knowledge, daughters' age, and mistrust in pharmaceutical companies and physicians. Mothers were not in favor of the HPV vaccine mandate.
Findings demonstrate the need to develop and evaluate physician-led interventions on HPV and vaccine importance, and engage these mothers in intervention development to build trust between physicians, researchers, and Black mothers to improve HPV vaccine uptake in Black female adolescents.
宫颈癌的差异仍然存在,并在黑人和非西班牙裔白种女性之间扩大。人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗有可能减少这种差异,但在黑人少女中仍未得到充分利用。我们调查了与黑人母亲为女儿接种 HPV 疫苗的意愿相关的社会心理和文化因素,并探讨了对 HPV 疫苗强制接种的看法。
在这项定量主导、混合方法研究中,对黑人母亲(n=237)进行了横断面调查,并对其中 9 人进行了后续半结构化访谈。采用 2 步逻辑回归确定与黑人母亲接种 HPV 疫苗意愿相关的因素。主题内容分析确定了新出现的主题。
感知易感性(p=.044)、感知障碍(p<.001)和主观规范(p=.001)是母亲 HPV 疫苗接种意愿的重要预测因素。后续访谈提供了影响母亲意愿的因素的见解。低意愿的母亲认为女儿目前没有性行为或近期没有性行为,因此没有 HPV 风险。如果存在先前的关系,儿科医生是影响母亲决策的最有影响力的人。然而,许多母亲没有收到儿科医生为女儿推荐 HPV 疫苗的建议。影响母亲决策的因素包括知识、女儿的年龄以及对制药公司和医生的不信任。母亲不赞成 HPV 疫苗强制接种。
研究结果表明,需要制定和评估以医生为主导的 HPV 和疫苗重要性干预措施,并让这些母亲参与干预措施的制定,以建立医生、研究人员和黑人母亲之间的信任,从而提高黑人少女接种 HPV 疫苗的比例。