| Literature DB >> 26344111 |
Jennifer Young Pierce1, Jeffrey E Korte2, Laura A Carr3, Catherine B Gasper4, Susan C Modesitt5.
Abstract
Since introduction of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, there remains low uptake compared to other adolescent vaccines. There is limited information postapproval about parental attitudes and barriers when presenting for routine care. This study evaluates HPV vaccine uptake and assesses demographics and attitudes correlating with vaccination for girls aged 11-12 years. A prospective cohort study was performed utilizing the University of Virginia (UVA) Clinical Data Repository (CDR). The CDR was used to identify girls aged 11-12 presenting to any UVA practice for a well-child visit between May 2008 and April 2009. Billing data were searched to determine rates of HPV vaccine uptake. The parents of all identified girls were contacted four to seven months after the visit to complete a telephone questionnaire including insurance information, child's vaccination status, HPV vaccine attitudes, and demographics. Five hundred and fifty girls were identified, 48.2% of whom received at least one HPV vaccine dose. White race and private insurance were negatively associated with HPV vaccine initiation (RR 0.72, 95% CI 0.61-0.85 and RR 0.85, 95% CI 0.72-1.01, respectively). In the follow-up questionnaire, 242 interviews were conducted and included in the final cohort. In the sample, 183 (75.6%) parents reported white race, 38 (15.7%) black race, and 27 (11.2%) reported other race. Overall 85% of parents understood that the HPV vaccine was recommended and 58.9% of parents believed the HPV vaccine was safe. In multivariate logistic regression, patients of black and other minority races were 4.9 and 4.2 times more likely to receive the HPV vaccine compared to their white counterparts. Safety concerns were the strongest barrier to vaccination. To conclude, HPV vaccine uptake was higher among minority girls and girls with public insurance in this cohort.Entities:
Keywords: HPV; adolescent; barriers; cervical cancer prevention; human papillomavirus; vaccine; well child care
Year: 2013 PMID: 26344111 PMCID: PMC4494229 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines1030250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Demographics of total population compared to cohort of telephone interview respondents.
| Population | Cohort | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n = 550 | n = 242 | |||||
|
|
| 350 | 63.6% | 152 | 62.8% | 0.990 |
|
| 200 | 36.4% | 87 | 36.0% | ||
|
|
| 396 | 72.0% | 183 | 75.6% | 0.981 |
|
| 115 | 20.9% | 38 | 15.7% | ||
|
| 39 | 7.1% | 27 | 11.2% | ||
|
|
| 292 | 53.1% | 201 | 83.1% | 0.944 |
|
| 175 | 31.8% | 38 | 15.7% | ||
|
| 22 | 4.0% | 3 | 1.2% | ||
|
| 61 | 11.1% | 0 | 0.0% | ||
|
|
| 284 | 51.6% | 122 | 50.4% | 0.954 |
|
| 265 | 48.2% | 106 | 43.8% | ||
|
| 128 | 23.3% | 42 | 17.4% | ||
|
| 0 | 0.0% | 14 | 5.8% | ||
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine uptake (≥1 dose received) by insurance and race in population of 11–12 year old girls presenting for well child visits between May 2008–April 2009.
| HPV vaccine uptake | % | RR | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| 130/292 | 44.5% | 0.85 * | 0.72–1.01 |
|
| 103/175 | 58.9% | 1.36 † | 1.15–1.61 | |
|
| 11/22 | 50.0% | |||
|
| 21/61 | 34.4% | |||
|
|
| 172/396 | 43.4% | 0.72 | 0.61–0.85 |
|
| 70/115 | 60.9% | 1.36 ** | 1.13–1.63 | |
|
| 23/39 | 59.0% | |||
|
| 265/550 | 48.2% |
* Compared to publically insured or self-paying patients, Patients with unknown insurance excluded given heterogeneity of the group. † Compared to privately insured patients. § Statistical comparisons not performed given small numbers in groups. Compared to black or other race. ** Compared to nonhispanic white race.
Figure 1Diagram of cohort originating from study population.
Figure 2Vaccination rates of recommended adolescent vaccines by race.
Figure 3Vaccination rates of recommended adolescent vaccines by insurance status.
Final regression model showing factors independently associated with initiating the HPV vaccine series.
| OR | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4.9 | 1.8–13.6 | 0.0023 |
|
| 4.2 | 1.1–16.6 | 0.042 |
|
| 2.1 | 0.97–4.4 | 0.06 |
|
| 1.7 | 1.1–2.6 | 0.014 |
|
| 0.19 | 0.093–0.37 | <0.0001 |
* As compared to nonhispanic white race.
HPV vaccine uptake by insurance status and race: supplemental data for Table 2.
| HPV vaccine uptake | % | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| 130/292 | 44.5% | 38.9–50.3 |
|
| 103/175 | 58.9% | 51.5–65.9 | |
|
| 11/22 | 50% | 31–69 | |
|
| 21/61 | 34% | 24–47 | |
|
|
| 172/396 | 43.4% | 38.6–48.3 |
|
| 70/115 | 60.9% | 51.7–69.3 | |
|
| 23/39 | 59% | 43–73 | |
|
| 265/550 | 48.2% | 44–52.4 |
Supplemental data for Figure 2.
| Vaccine | White * n = 179 | % | 95% CI | Black * N = 37 | % | 95% CI | Other * N = 19 | % | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HPV | 85 | 47.5 | 40%–55% | 28 | 75.7 | 60%–87% | 13 | 68.4 | 46%–85% |
| Meningococcal | 133 | 74.3 | 67%–80% | 22 | 59.5 | 44%–74% | 10 | 52.6 | 32%–72% |
| DTaP | 175 | 97.7 | 94%–99% | 36 | 97.3 | 86%–99% | 17 | 89.5 | 69%–97% |
| Varicella | 161 | 89.9 | 85%–94% | 34 | 91.9 | 79%–97% | 15 | 79 | 57%–91% |
* Data missing for 4 patients of white race, 1 patient of black race, and 8 patients of other race.
Supplemental data for Figure 3.
| Vaccine | Private n = 201 | % | 95% CI | Public/no insurance n = 41 | % | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HPV | 103 | 51.2 | 44.4–58.1 | 27 | 65.8 | 51–78 |
| Meningococcal | 142 | 70.7 | 64–76.5 | 28 | 68.3 | 53–80 |
| DTaP | 163 | 81 | 75.1–85.9 | 38 | 92.7 | 81–98 |
| Varicella | 182 | 90.6 | 85.7–93.9 | 33 | 80.5 | 66–90 |
Insurance status by race.
| Insurance status | Nonhispanic white n = 396 | Black n = 115 | Other n = 39 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Private | 235 (59.3%) | 38 (33%) | 19 (48.7%) |
| Public | 101 (25.5%) | 61 (53%) | 11 (28.2%) |
| Self pay | 13 (3.3%) | 9 (7.8%) | 2 (5.1%) |
| Unknown | 47 (11.9%) | 7 96.1%) | 7 (17.9%) |