Department of Population and Data Sciences, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, United States.
Center for Health Promotion and Prevention Research, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health, Houston, TX, United States.
Prev Med. 2020 Feb;131:105968. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2019.105968. Epub 2019 Dec 24.
Multilevel factors impact HPV vaccine series initiation and completion among adolescents in the U.S. Synthesis of these factors is needed to inform intervention development and to direct future research. Current frameworks synthesizing factors focus on females only and do not include both series initiation and completion outcomes. We conducted a systematic review of reviews to identify modifiable individual-, provider-, and clinic-level factors associated with HPV vaccination outcomes among U.S. adolescents and developed a multilevel framework illustrating relations between factors to inform intervention development. We searched Medline, PsychInfo, Pubmed, CINAHL, and ERIC databases and included reviews published 2006 to July 2, 2018 describing individual-, provider-, or clinic-level factors quantitatively associated with HPV vaccination among U.S. adolescents. Two coders independently screened reviews, extracted data, and determined quality ratings. Sixteen reviews containing 481 unique primary studies met criteria. Factors synthesized into the multilevel framework included parent psychosocial factors (knowledge, beliefs, outcome expectations, intentions) and behaviors, provider recommendation, and patient-targeted and provider-targeted clinic systems. The scope of our framework and review advances research in two key ways. First, the framework illustrates salient modifiable factors at multiple levels on which to intervene to increase HPV vaccination. Second, the review identified critical gaps in the literature at each level. Future research should link the body of literature on parental intentions to vaccination outcomes, identify provider psychosocial factors associated with recommendation behaviors and subsequent vaccine uptake in their patient population, and understand clinic factors associated with successful implementation of patient- and provider-targeted system-level interventions.
多层次因素影响美国青少年 HPV 疫苗系列的启动和完成。综合这些因素对于为干预措施的制定提供信息和指导未来的研究是必要的。目前综合因素的框架仅关注女性,并且不包括系列启动和完成的结果。我们进行了一项系统综述,以确定与美国青少年 HPV 疫苗接种结果相关的可改变的个体、提供者和诊所水平因素,并制定了一个多层次框架,说明因素之间的关系,为干预措施的制定提供信息。我们在 Medline、PsychInfo、Pubmed、CINAHL 和 ERIC 数据库中进行了搜索,并纳入了 2006 年至 2018 年 7 月 2 日期间描述与美国青少年 HPV 疫苗接种相关的个体、提供者或诊所水平因素的定量相关的综述。两名编目员独立筛选综述、提取数据并确定质量评分。有 16 篇综述符合标准,包含 481 项独立的原始研究。综合到多层次框架中的因素包括父母的心理社会因素(知识、信念、结果期望、意图)和行为、提供者的建议以及以患者和提供者为目标的诊所系统。我们的框架的范围和综述在两个关键方面推进了研究。首先,该框架说明了在多个层面上有哪些可改变的重要因素可以进行干预,以增加 HPV 疫苗的接种率。其次,综述确定了每个层面文献中的关键空白。未来的研究应该将父母接种疫苗意图的文献联系起来,确定与建议行为以及随后在患者人群中接种疫苗相关的提供者心理社会因素,并了解与成功实施以患者和提供者为目标的系统层面干预相关的诊所因素。