| Literature DB >> 34185805 |
Joseph Rujumba1, Mathias Akugizibwe2, Nicole E Basta3, Cecily Banura4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Vaccination with the 2-dose HPV vaccine series among adolescent girls in Uganda remains low after almost 5 years since the vaccine was included into the routine national immunization program and barriers are not well understood.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34185805 PMCID: PMC8241119 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253735
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Study population, type and number of interviews.
| Study population | Data collection method | Sample size |
|---|---|---|
| Girl | IDI | 8 |
| Caregiver | KII | 8 |
| Healthcare Worker | KII | 8 |
| VHT | KII | 8 |
| Teacher or School Administrator | KII | 8 |
Participant category and age.
| Participant Category | Average Age (range) years |
|---|---|
| Adolescent girls | 12.0 (10–15) |
| Caregivers | 39.3 (25–56) |
| Healthcare Workers | 39.3 (26–57) |
| VHTs | 40.4 (32–47) |
| Teacher/school administrator | 36.0 (26–45) |
*3 girls received 2 doses (fully vaccinated), 3 girls received only 1 dose (incomplete vaccination), 2 unvaccinated girls.
** 4 Nursing assistants & 4 Nurse and/or midwife.
*** VHT- 6 vaccinators and 2 mobilizers.
**** 7 teachers & 1 head teacher (school administrator).
Thematic presentation of barriers to HPV vaccination in Oyam District.
| Major Theme | Sub-theme–barrier |
|---|---|
| - Inadequate knowledge about the HPV vaccine | |
| - Limited healthcare workers’, VHTs’ and teachers’ knowledge about HPV vaccine and national HPV vaccination policy | |
| - Rumors and misconceptions about the vaccine and vaccination |