Cunningham-Erves Jennifer, Koyama Tatsuki, Huang Yi, Jones Jessica, Wilkins Consuelo H, Harnack Lora, McAfee Caree, Hull Pamela C
Department of Internal Medicine, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, TN, United States.
Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States.
JMIR Cancer. 2019 Jul 2;5(2):e13832. doi: 10.2196/13832.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine hesitancy among parents contributes to low vaccination coverage in adolescents. To improve health care provider communication and vaccine recommendation practices with hesitant parents, it is important to understand how providers perceive parental HPV vaccine hesitancy.
This study aimed to characterize perceived reasons for parental HPV vaccine hesitancy and identify factors associated with perceived parental hesitancy among providers at community-based pediatric clinics.
In 2018, providers in 23 community-based pediatric clinics in Tennessee were invited to complete a Web-based baseline survey as part of a larger quality improvement study focused on HPV vaccine uptake. These survey data were used for a cross-sectional, secondary data analysis. Scale scores ranging from 0 to 100 were calculated for provider self-efficacy (confidence in ability to recommend HPV vaccine), provider outcome expectations (expectations that recommendation will influence parents' decisions), and perceived parental HPV vaccine hesitancy. Provider confidence in HPV vaccine safety and effectiveness were categorized as high versus low. Clinic-level exposures examined were clinic size and rural-urban location. Descriptive analyses were used to characterize perceived parental barriers by provider type. Mixed-effects linear regression models were fit taking one exposure variable at a time, whereas controlling for provider type, age, gender, and race to identify provider- and clinic-level factors associated with perceived parental barriers to HPV vaccination.
Of the 187 providers located in the 23 clinics, 137 completed the survey. The majority of physician providers were white and female, with a higher percentage of females among nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs). The most common parental barriers to HPV vaccination perceived by providers were concerns about HPV vaccine safety (88%), child being too young (78%), low risk of HPV infection for child through sexual activity (70%), and mistrust in vaccines (59%). In adjusted mixed models, perceived parental HPV vaccine hesitancy was significantly associated with several provider-level factors: self-efficacy (P=.001), outcome expectations (P<.001), and confidence in HPV vaccine safety (P=.009). No significant associations were observed between perceived parental HPV vaccine hesitancy and clinic-level factors clinic size nor location.
Researchers developing provider-focused interventions to reduce parental HPV vaccine hesitancy should consider addressing providers' self-efficacy, outcome expectations, and confidence in HPV vaccine safety to help providers communicate more effectively with HPV vaccine hesitant parents.
父母对人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗的犹豫导致青少年疫苗接种率较低。为了改善医疗服务提供者与持犹豫态度的父母之间的沟通以及疫苗推荐做法,了解提供者如何看待父母对HPV疫苗的犹豫态度很重要。
本研究旨在描述父母对HPV疫苗犹豫的感知原因,并确定社区儿科诊所提供者中与父母犹豫态度相关的因素。
2018年,田纳西州23家社区儿科诊所的提供者被邀请完成一项基于网络的基线调查,作为一项更大规模的以提高HPV疫苗接种率为重点的质量改进研究的一部分。这些调查数据用于横断面二次数据分析。计算提供者自我效能感(推荐HPV疫苗的能力信心)、提供者结果期望(推荐会影响父母决定的期望)以及父母对HPV疫苗犹豫态度的量表分数,范围为0至100。将提供者对HPV疫苗安全性和有效性的信心分为高和低。检查的诊所层面暴露因素为诊所规模和城乡位置。描述性分析用于按提供者类型描述父母感知到的障碍。混合效应线性回归模型一次纳入一个暴露变量,同时控制提供者类型、年龄、性别和种族,以确定与父母对HPV疫苗接种的感知障碍相关的提供者和诊所层面因素。
在23家诊所的187名提供者中,137名完成了调查。大多数医生提供者是白人女性,执业护士(NP)和医师助理(PA)中的女性比例更高。提供者认为父母对HPV疫苗接种最常见的障碍是对HPV疫苗安全性的担忧(88%)、孩子太小(78%)、孩子通过性行为感染HPV的风险低(70%)以及对疫苗的不信任(59%)。在调整后的混合模型中,父母对HPV疫苗的犹豫态度与几个提供者层面的因素显著相关:自我效能感(P = 0.001)、结果期望(P < 0.001)以及对HPV疫苗安全性的信心(P = 0.009)。在父母对HPV疫苗的犹豫态度与诊所层面因素诊所规模和位置之间未观察到显著关联。
开发以提供者为重点的干预措施以减少父母对HPV疫苗犹豫的研究人员应考虑解决提供者的自我效能感、结果期望以及对HPV疫苗安全性的信心,以帮助提供者更有效地与对HPV疫苗持犹豫态度的父母进行沟通。