Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Meharry Medical College, 1005 Dr. D.B. Todd Jr. Blvd., Nashville, TN, 37208-3599, USA.
Meharry Vanderbilt Alliance, 1005 Dr. D.B. Todd Jr. Blvd., Biomedical Building, Nashville, TN, 37208, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Oct;11(5):2958-2972. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01754-8. Epub 2023 Aug 21.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination rates remain suboptimal among African American adolescents. Although provider recommendations during clinical encounters are believed to be highly effective in increasing uptake and series completion, little has been reported about parent-child perspectives on the counseling received during these encounters. Among African American parent-child dyads, we sought to explore and compare interactions, needs, and preferences during clinical encounters by child's HPV vaccination status. We applied a qualitative, phenomenological study design to conduct semi-structured interviews with African American parent-child dyads representing children who were unvaccinated (n = 10), had initiated but not completed (n = 11), or had completed the HPV vaccine series (n = 9). Using iterative, inductive-deductive thematic analysis, five themes were generated: (1) parents' attitudes varied about the HPV vaccine but were mostly positive for vaccines in general; (2) patient-parent-provider clinical encounters from the parent perspective; (3) patient-parent-provider clinical encounters from the child perspective; (4) methods of distribution of supplemental HPV information; and (5) communication desired on HPV vaccination by parents and children. Parents stating they received a provider's recommendation increased by vaccination status (unvaccinated: 6 out of 10; initiated: 7 out of 11; completed: 9 out of 9). Most parents and children were not satisfied with provider communication on the HPV vaccine and used supplemental materials to inform decision-making. Ongoing communication on the HPV vaccine was requested even post-vaccination of the child. During clinical encounters, children and parental messaging needs are similar yet dissimilar. We offer communication strategies and messaging that can be used for African American parent-child dyads by child HPV vaccination status during a clinical encounter.
人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种率在非裔美国青少年中仍然不理想。虽然在临床就诊期间,医务人员的建议被认为可以有效地提高疫苗接种率和系列完成率,但关于家长和孩子对这些就诊期间接受的咨询的看法的报道却很少。在非裔美国家长-孩子二人组中,我们试图根据孩子的 HPV 疫苗接种状况,探索和比较临床就诊期间的互动、需求和偏好。我们采用定性、现象学研究设计,对未接种(n=10)、已接种但未完成(n=11)或已完成 HPV 疫苗系列接种(n=9)的 HPV 疫苗的非裔美国家长-孩子二人组进行半结构化访谈。使用迭代的、归纳演绎的主题分析方法,生成了五个主题:(1)父母对 HPV 疫苗的态度各不相同,但总体上对疫苗持积极态度;(2)从父母的角度看患者-家长-医务人员的临床就诊;(3)从孩子的角度看患者-家长-医务人员的临床就诊;(4)补充 HPV 信息的分发方法;(5)父母和孩子对 HPV 疫苗接种的沟通需求。父母表示他们收到了医务人员的推荐,这一比例随着疫苗接种状况的不同而增加(未接种:10 人中的 6 人;已接种:11 人中的 7 人;已完成:9 人中的 9 人)。大多数家长和孩子对医务人员关于 HPV 疫苗的沟通都不满意,他们使用补充材料来做出决策。即使孩子已经接种了疫苗,他们仍要求继续进行 HPV 疫苗的沟通。在临床就诊期间,孩子和家长的信息需求相似但又有所不同。我们提供了针对非裔美国家长-孩子二人组的沟通策略和信息,可根据孩子的 HPV 疫苗接种状况在临床就诊期间使用。