Sonawane Kalyani, Zhu Yenan, Damgacioglu Haluk, Garg Ashvita, Graboyes Evan M, Montealegre Jane R, Brownstein Naomi C, Ford Marvella E, Roberts James R, Sterba Katherine R, Giuliano Anna R, Deshmukh Ashish A
Department of Public Health Sciences, College of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.
MUSC Hollings Cancer Center, Charleston, SC, USA.
Lancet Reg Health Am. 2024 Feb 19;31:100694. doi: 10.1016/j.lana.2024.100694. eCollection 2024 Mar.
In the USA, HPV vaccine coverage is substantially lower among adolescents from high-income households compared to their low-income counterparts. We examined and compared the factors associated with parental HPV vaccination intentions between socioeconomically divergent groups.
Data from unvaccinated and not fully HPV-vaccinated adolescents from the 2017-2021 National Immunization Survey (NIS)-Teen were analyzed. Socioeconomically advantaged vs. deprived groups were identified based on dichotomized income (material capital) and education (social capital). Parental intent to initiate and complete the HPV vaccine series was compared using bivariable analysis and the factors associated with lacking intent were identified.
The 2017-2021 NIS-Teen included a total of 212,643 participants; the final analytical sample consisted of 105,958 adolescents (an estimated 10.3 million adolescents) who were unvaccinated or not fully vaccinated. In the advantaged group, 64.7% of parents of unvaccinated adolescents (equating to 2.4 million US adolescents) had no intention to initiate the HPV vaccine compared to 40.9% of parents in the deprived group (equating to 0.2 million adolescents) ( < 0.0001; ). The most frequent reason for lacking intent in the advantaged group was 'safety concerns' (25.5%). In the deprived group, 'lack of knowledge', 'not recommended', and 'not needed' were common reasons (nearly 15% each). Lack of intent to complete the HPV vaccine series was higher in the advantaged group (43.9%; 1.1 million adolescents) compared to the deprived group (25.2%; 0.08 million adolescents) ( < 0.0001; ). More than half in the advantaged group (58.4%) and over a third (37.1%) in the deprived group cited 'already up to date' as the main reason for not completing the HPV vaccine series.
Lack of intent to initiate and complete the HPV vaccination series, particularly among socioeconomically advantaged parents is a significant barrier to achieving the national goal in the USA.
The US National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, MUSC Hollings Cancer Center Seed funding, and the US National Cancer Institutes.
在美国,与低收入家庭的青少年相比,高收入家庭青少年的人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种率要低得多。我们研究并比较了社会经济背景不同的群体中与父母HPV疫苗接种意愿相关的因素。
对2017 - 2021年全国免疫调查(NIS)-青少年中未接种HPV疫苗以及未全程接种HPV疫苗的青少年的数据进行分析。根据二分法划分的收入(物质资本)和教育程度(社会资本)来确定社会经济条件优越组与贫困组。使用双变量分析比较父母启动和完成HPV疫苗接种系列的意愿,并确定与缺乏意愿相关的因素。
2017 - 2021年NIS -青少年调查共纳入212,643名参与者;最终分析样本包括105,958名未接种或未全程接种HPV疫苗的青少年(估计有1030万青少年)。在条件优越组中,未接种HPV疫苗青少年的父母中有64.7%(相当于240万美国青少年)无意启动HPV疫苗接种,而贫困组中这一比例为40.9%(相当于20万青少年)(<0.0001;)。条件优越组中缺乏意愿的最常见原因是“安全担忧”(25.5%)。在贫困组中,“知识缺乏”、“不推荐”和“不需要”是常见原因(各占近15%)。与贫困组(25.2%;8万青少年)相比,条件优越组中缺乏完成HPV疫苗接种系列意愿的比例更高(43.9%;110万青少年)(<0.0001;)。条件优越组中超过一半(58.4%)以及贫困组中超过三分之一(37.1%)的人将“已接种最新疫苗”作为未完成HPV疫苗接种系列的主要原因。
缺乏启动和完成HPV疫苗接种系列意愿,尤其是在社会经济条件优越的父母中,是美国实现国家目标的一个重大障碍。
美国国立少数族裔健康与健康差异研究所、国立转化医学推进科学中心、南卡罗来纳医科大学霍林斯癌症中心种子基金以及美国国立癌症研究所。