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原著民族对增强 HPV 疫苗接种的障碍和支持的看法:可持续的、以社区为驱动的策略的基础。

First nations people's perspectives on barriers and supports for enhancing HPV vaccination: Foundations for sustainable, community-driven strategies.

机构信息

Department of Family Medicine, Cumming School of Medicine, Calgary, AB, Canada.

Department of Oncology, Cumming School of Medicine, Calgary, AB, Canada.

出版信息

Gynecol Oncol. 2018 Apr;149(1):93-100. doi: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2017.12.024.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

In Canada, Indigenous people have higher human papillomavirus (HPV) infection rates, lower screening rates for cervical cancer, and higher rates of invasive cancer, leading to worse cervical cancer-related outcomes than observed in non-Indigenous Canadian women. Lingering harms from European colonization drive these health inequities and create public health challenges. Policy guidance is needed to optimize HPV vaccination rates and, thereby, decrease the burden of HPV-related illness, including high-morbidity surgical procedures and chemo-radiotherapy. The Enhancing HPV Vaccination In First Nations Populations in Alberta (EHVINA) project focuses on First Nations, a diverse subset of recognized Indigenous people in Canada, and seeks to increase HPV vaccination among girls and boys living in First Nation communities.

METHODS

Developing an effective strategy requires partnership with affected communities to better understand knowledge and perceptions about cancer, healthcare, and the HPV vaccine. A 2017 community gathering was convened to engage First Nations community members, health directors, and health services researchers in dialogue around unique barriers and supports to HPV vaccination in Alberta. Voices of community Elders, parents, health directors, and cancer survivors (n=24) are presented as qualitative evidence to help inform intervention design.

RESULTS

Key findings from discussions indicate barriers to HPV vaccination include resource constraints and service infrastructure gaps, historical mistrust in healthcare systems, impacts of changing modes of communication, and community sensitivities regarding sexual health promotion. Supports were identified as strengthened inter-generational relationships in communities.

CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTION

Ongoing dialogue and co-development of community-based strategies to increase HPV vaccine uptake are required. The identification of possible barriers to HPV vaccination in a Canadian Indigenous population contributes to limited global literature on this subject and may inform researchers and policy makers who work with Indigenous populations in other regions.

摘要

目的

在加拿大,原住民的人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)感染率较高,宫颈癌筛查率较低,浸润性癌症发病率较高,导致与宫颈癌相关的结局比非原住民加拿大女性更差。欧洲殖民化带来的持续伤害导致了这些健康不平等,并带来了公共卫生挑战。需要政策指导来优化 HPV 疫苗接种率,从而降低 HPV 相关疾病的负担,包括高发病率的手术和化疗放疗。在艾伯塔省促进第一民族人群 HPV 疫苗接种(EHVINA)项目专注于第一民族,这是加拿大承认的原住民的一个多样化群体,旨在提高生活在第一民族社区的女孩和男孩的 HPV 疫苗接种率。

方法

制定有效的策略需要与受影响的社区合作,以更好地了解癌症、医疗保健和 HPV 疫苗的知识和看法。2017 年召开了一次社区聚会,让第一民族社区成员、卫生主任和卫生服务研究人员就艾伯塔省 HPV 疫苗接种的独特障碍和支持因素进行对话。24 位社区长者、家长、卫生主任和癌症幸存者的声音被作为定性证据呈现,以帮助为干预设计提供信息。

结果

讨论的主要结果表明,HPV 疫苗接种的障碍包括资源限制和服务基础设施差距、对医疗保健系统的历史不信任、沟通方式变化的影响以及社区对性健康促进的敏感性。支持措施包括社区内代际关系的加强。

结论和未来方向

需要进行持续的对话和共同制定基于社区的战略,以提高 HPV 疫苗接种率。在加拿大原住民人群中发现 HPV 疫苗接种的可能障碍,有助于丰富关于这一主题的有限的全球文献,并为与其他地区原住民合作的研究人员和政策制定者提供信息。

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