University of Missouri-Kansas City, School of Nursing and Health Studies, 2464 Charlotte St, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA.
University of Kansas School of Medicine, 3901 Rainbow Blvd, Kansas City, KS 66160, USA.
Vaccine. 2020 Mar 4;38(11):2566-2571. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2020.01.086. Epub 2020 Feb 8.
Men and women in county jails make up a population that is difficult to reach with traditional preventive health interventions. Collaborations between local health departments and county jails represent an opportunity to enhance public health by reaching a vulnerable population with services like vaccinations. The objective of this study was to coordinate planning and implementation of a collaborative program between a local health department (HD) and a county jail to offer human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccinations to adolescents (ages 10-17) and young adults (ages 18-26) in the jail and to identify facilitators and barriers to inform future program development.
A county-municipal jail and a local HD in Kansas participated. A case study method was employed based on data collected from a focus group, telephone interviews, and site observations, September 2016 to December 2017. Data were coded using codes roughly drawn from the consolidated framework for implementation research (CFIR). Codes were then consolidated into themes related to barriers and facilitators.
No adults were vaccinated; two juveniles were vaccinated. Barriers to a collaborative program to offer HPV vaccine to young adults arose in two areas: constrained resources and divergent organizational cultures and priorities. Barriers to offering HPV vaccinations to juveniles in the jail included parental consent and the unpredictable, often brief duration of juvenile detentions. A shared commitment to offering HPV vaccination services by leaders and staff in the two agencies was a key facilitator.
Finding ways to leverage leadership and staff buy-in and address specific barriers of constrained resources and divergent culture and priorities merits close attention, since partnerships between jails and local HD have potential to increase HPV vaccination rates in an overlooked population and advance public health.
在县监狱中的男性和女性构成了一个难以通过传统预防保健干预措施接触到的人群。地方卫生部门和县监狱之间的合作代表了通过为服务对象提供疫苗接种等服务来增强公共卫生的机会,这些服务对象包括易感染人群。本研究的目的是协调地方卫生部门(HD)和县监狱之间的合作计划的规划和实施,为监狱中的青少年(10-17 岁)和年轻人(18-26 岁)提供人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种,并确定促进和阻碍因素,为未来的项目开发提供信息。
堪萨斯州的一个县-市监狱和一个地方 HD 参与了该研究。采用案例研究方法,数据来自 2016 年 9 月至 2017 年 12 月期间的焦点小组、电话访谈和现场观察。使用大致取自综合实施研究框架(CFIR)的代码对数据进行编码。然后将代码合并为与障碍和促进因素相关的主题。
没有成年人接种疫苗;两名青少年接种了疫苗。为年轻人提供 HPV 疫苗的合作计划面临两个障碍:资源有限和组织文化及优先事项的差异。在监狱中为青少年提供 HPV 疫苗接种的障碍包括家长同意和青少年拘留时间的不可预测性,通常很短。两个机构的领导和工作人员对提供 HPV 疫苗接种服务的共同承诺是一个关键的促进因素。
寻找利用领导和工作人员的支持并解决资源有限、文化和优先事项差异等具体障碍的方法值得密切关注,因为监狱和地方卫生部门之间的伙伴关系有可能提高被忽视人群的 HPV 疫苗接种率,促进公共卫生。