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in a large study, said Kahee A. Mohammed, MD, of Saint Louis (Missouri) University Center for Outcomes Research, and associates.
Messages to boost HPV vaccination rates may need to be targeted based on maternal education, non-Hispanic white ethnicity, and provider recommendations, the researchers said.
Among unvaccinated girls, independent variables predicting parents’ intent to vaccinate teens for HPV were Hispanic race/ethnicity (AOR, 1.57), compared with non-Hispanic whites; mothers with less than a high school diploma (AOR, 1.86), compared with mothers with a college education; and a provider recommendation for HPV vaccine (AOR, 1.38).
Also, mothers with some college education were more likely to intend to vaccinate their sons (AOR, 1.21), but less likely to intend to vaccinate their daughters (AOR, .69) than mothers with a college education.
About 7% of the survey respondents said “not sure/don’t know” regarding their intent to vaccinate their teens. The largest percentage had boys (66%), were non-Hispanic whites (47%), lived in the South (38%), lived above the poverty line (62%), the mother was a college graduate (31%), and had never received a recommendation for HPV vaccination from a health care provider (75%).
“Health care providers should actively engage in discussions with parents about HPV and strongly recommend the vaccine to all eligible patients concurrently with other routinely administered vaccinations to dispel any potential negative assumptions or opinions regarding HPV vaccination, especially among girls,” Dr. Mohammed and his associates said.
Read more at (Prev Chronic Dis. 2017. doi: 10.5888/pcd14.160314).
in a large study, said Kahee A. Mohammed, MD, of Saint Louis (Missouri) University Center for Outcomes Research, and associates.
Messages to boost HPV vaccination rates may need to be targeted based on maternal education, non-Hispanic white ethnicity, and provider recommendations, the researchers said.
Among unvaccinated girls, independent variables predicting parents’ intent to vaccinate teens for HPV were Hispanic race/ethnicity (AOR, 1.57), compared with non-Hispanic whites; mothers with less than a high school diploma (AOR, 1.86), compared with mothers with a college education; and a provider recommendation for HPV vaccine (AOR, 1.38).
Also, mothers with some college education were more likely to intend to vaccinate their sons (AOR, 1.21), but less likely to intend to vaccinate their daughters (AOR, .69) than mothers with a college education.
About 7% of the survey respondents said “not sure/don’t know” regarding their intent to vaccinate their teens. The largest percentage had boys (66%), were non-Hispanic whites (47%), lived in the South (38%), lived above the poverty line (62%), the mother was a college graduate (31%), and had never received a recommendation for HPV vaccination from a health care provider (75%).
“Health care providers should actively engage in discussions with parents about HPV and strongly recommend the vaccine to all eligible patients concurrently with other routinely administered vaccinations to dispel any potential negative assumptions or opinions regarding HPV vaccination, especially among girls,” Dr. Mohammed and his associates said.
Read more at (Prev Chronic Dis. 2017. doi: 10.5888/pcd14.160314).
in a large study, said Kahee A. Mohammed, MD, of Saint Louis (Missouri) University Center for Outcomes Research, and associates.
Messages to boost HPV vaccination rates may need to be targeted based on maternal education, non-Hispanic white ethnicity, and provider recommendations, the researchers said.
Among unvaccinated girls, independent variables predicting parents’ intent to vaccinate teens for HPV were Hispanic race/ethnicity (AOR, 1.57), compared with non-Hispanic whites; mothers with less than a high school diploma (AOR, 1.86), compared with mothers with a college education; and a provider recommendation for HPV vaccine (AOR, 1.38).
Also, mothers with some college education were more likely to intend to vaccinate their sons (AOR, 1.21), but less likely to intend to vaccinate their daughters (AOR, .69) than mothers with a college education.
About 7% of the survey respondents said “not sure/don’t know” regarding their intent to vaccinate their teens. The largest percentage had boys (66%), were non-Hispanic whites (47%), lived in the South (38%), lived above the poverty line (62%), the mother was a college graduate (31%), and had never received a recommendation for HPV vaccination from a health care provider (75%).
“Health care providers should actively engage in discussions with parents about HPV and strongly recommend the vaccine to all eligible patients concurrently with other routinely administered vaccinations to dispel any potential negative assumptions or opinions regarding HPV vaccination, especially among girls,” Dr. Mohammed and his associates said.
Read more at (Prev Chronic Dis. 2017. doi: 10.5888/pcd14.160314).
FROM PREVENTING CHRONIC DISEASE