Immigrant Health and Cancer Disparities Service, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, 633 3rd Avenue, New York, NY, 10017, USA.
Department of Medicine, Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA.
J Community Health. 2024 Feb;49(1):127-138. doi: 10.1007/s10900-023-01248-y. Epub 2023 Aug 9.
Little is known of HPV vaccination (HPVV) recommendation practices among healthcare providers who treat the Arab American community. Evidence indicates that HPVV patient uptake is low in this population. A survey was administered to healthcare providers (N = 46, 63% response rate) who treated ≥ 5% Arab American patients aged 9-26 years in areas of New York City and New Jersey with large Arab American populations. They were asked about barriers to HPVV recommendation and uptake among their Arab American patients. Providers (Doctors of Medicine and Osteopathy, Nurse Practitioners, and Physician Assistants) mostly worked in pediatrics (41%), primary care/internal medicine (26%), obstetrics/gynecology (20%), and family medicine (15%). Most (91%) were confident in their ability to effectively counsel their patients on HPVV. The most frequent provider-reported barriers to administering the HPVV to Arab American patients were patient cultural/religious practices (reported by 67%) and patient and provider difficulties with insurance reimbursement (44%). Most providers (84%) agreed that organizations/programs to increase HPVV uptake among Arab American patients were needed. Providers felt that HPVV uptake could be increased with educational materials in the patients' native languages ("very useful," 81%) and provider cultural competency training ("very useful," 65%). In responses to open-ended questions, cultural and religious HPVV barriers were a salient topic, as were linguistic barriers and provider burdens related to HPVV costs and regulations. HPVV uptake could potentially be improved with Arabic language education materials, provider education that is culturally and linguistically tailored to the Arab American community, and policies to address HPVV financial and regulatory burdens.
HPV 疫苗接种(HPVV)在治疗美籍阿拉伯人群的医疗保健提供者中的推荐实践知之甚少。有证据表明,该人群中的 HPVV 患者接种率较低。在纽约市和新泽西州的一些地区,对治疗≥5%的美籍阿拉伯 9-26 岁患者的医疗保健提供者(N=46,响应率为 63%)进行了一项调查,这些地区的美籍阿拉伯人口众多。调查询问了他们在为其美籍阿拉伯患者推荐和接种 HPVV 方面的障碍。提供者(医学博士和骨科医生、执业护士和医师助理)主要在儿科(41%)、初级保健/内科(26%)、妇产科(20%)和家庭医学(15%)工作。大多数(91%)人对自己有效为患者提供关于 HPVV 的咨询的能力充满信心。向美籍阿拉伯患者接种 HPVV 的最常见提供者报告的障碍是患者的文化/宗教习俗(67%报告)以及患者和提供者在保险报销方面的困难(44%)。大多数提供者(84%)认为需要组织/计划来增加美籍阿拉伯患者的 HPVV 接种率。提供者认为,通过使用患者母语的教育材料(81%的人认为“非常有用”)和提供文化能力培训(65%的人认为“非常有用”)可以提高 HPVV 的接种率。在对开放式问题的回答中,文化和宗教方面的 HPV 疫苗接种障碍是一个突出的问题,语言障碍以及与 HPV 疫苗接种费用和规定相关的提供者负担也是如此。通过阿拉伯语教育材料、针对美籍阿拉伯社区进行文化和语言调整的提供者教育,以及解决 HPV 疫苗接种财务和监管负担的政策,HPV 疫苗接种率有可能得到提高。