Tan Sensen, Li Yufei, Wang Sumeng, Yan Huijiao, Xu Yang, Zhang Linlin, Xue Jiao, Lian Xuemei, Yin Jian, Qiao Youlin
Department of Cancer Epidemiology, National Cancer Center/ National Clinical Research Center for Cancer/ Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100021, China.
School of Population Medicine and Public Health, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, 100730, China.
medRxiv. 2025 Sep 2:2025.08.28.25334402. doi: 10.1101/2025.08.28.25334402.
This cross-sectional study was conducted in Ordos City aimed to explore the potential factors influencing parents' awareness, knowledge, and health beliefs toward human papillomavirus (HPV), and willingness to vaccinate their 13-18-year-old daughters against HPV free of charge.
This cross-sectional study was conducted on parents with daughters aged 13-18 years, in Ordos City, China. Data was collected using an online questionnaire survey, including parental sociodemographic characteristics, awareness, knowledge, and health beliefs about HPV, and willingness to HPV vaccine. Mean scores on HPV and its vaccine-related knowledge and were calculated, separately, and parents above the mean level were included in bivariate and multivariate analyses.
After removing illogical values, a total of 1,547 parents were analyzed, with an average age of 42.25 years old, and most of them (92.4%) were female. 78% of participants had heard of HPV, 93% had heard of the HPV vaccine, and 85.5% of parents were willing to vaccinate their daughters. The mean Knowledge score (KS) was 1.98 ± 1.81 (out of 7) and the mean Health belief score (HBS) was 6.18 ± 2.94 (out of 12). Factors that potentially influence knowledge were found to be gender, married status, education, and income. Registered permanent residence (girls), income, and vaccination status (female parents) were significantly associated with health beliefs and willingness.
In conclusion, many parents had insufficient knowledge about the vaccine and low health beliefs. It is critical to conduct health education campaigns to abolish the barriers identified to accelerate the rollout and increase the national vaccination coverage of the HPV vaccine in China.
本横断面研究在鄂尔多斯市开展,旨在探讨影响父母对人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)的认知、知识和健康信念,以及为其13 - 18岁女儿免费接种HPV疫苗意愿的潜在因素。
本横断面研究在中国鄂尔多斯市对有13 - 18岁女儿的父母进行。通过在线问卷调查收集数据,包括父母的社会人口学特征、对HPV的认知、知识和健康信念,以及对HPV疫苗的接种意愿。分别计算HPV及其疫苗相关知识的平均得分,得分高于平均水平的父母纳入双变量和多变量分析。
去除不合理值后,共分析了1547名父母,平均年龄42.25岁,其中大多数(92.4%)为女性。78%的参与者听说过HPV,93%听说过HPV疫苗,85.5%的父母愿意为女儿接种疫苗。知识平均得分(KS)为1.98 ± 1.81(满分7分),健康信念平均得分(HBS)为6.18 ± 2.94(满分12分)。发现可能影响知识的因素有性别、婚姻状况、教育程度和收入。户籍(女孩)、收入和接种状况(母亲)与健康信念和接种意愿显著相关。
总之,许多父母对疫苗的知识不足且健康信念较低。开展健康教育活动以消除已确定的障碍,对于加快中国HPV疫苗的推广和提高国家疫苗接种覆盖率至关重要。