Abstract B04: Communication about HPV: Shared knowledge and HPV vaccine uptake among parents and adolescents in rural eastern North Carolina

Essie Torres, A. Richman, Qiang Wu
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Abstract

Introduction: Although vaccination against cancer is a significant breakthrough, uptake is low. HPV-vaccination rates among girls, ages 13-17, are less than ideal; nationwide, only 63% initiated and only 42% completed the 3-shot series in 2015. These rates are significantly lower among girls who are ethnic minorities, live in poverty, and live in rural areas. The initiation rate in rural North Carolina (NC) counties (17%) is half that for the state as a whole (66%), and is even lower (11%) in the few eastern NC counties studied to date. This study presents data that examine HPV knowledge among parents and their children, and if higher knowledge concordance rates influenced greater HPV uptake among adolescents. Methods: The study was conducted in two rural clinics in eastern North Carolina. Study participants included female and male English- and Spanish-speaking parents and their children (ages 9-17), who were uninsured or Medicaid-insured. Data from this study is from a larger study that assessed if electronic reminders increased HPV vaccine series completion among adolescents and HPV knowledge among parents of adolescents in eastern North Carolina. Parents and their adolescent child completed a baseline survey that was administered during enrollment after the child received the first HPV dose and it assessed their HPV knowledge, and factors that might influence HPV vaccination uptake. Shot records were obtained for all adolescent participants throughout the 2-year study. The final sample included 257 parent-child dyads. Results: Mean parental and child age was 38 and 12, respectively. Most identified as Black (60%) or Hispanic (28%), followed by White (10%). Completion rates for intervention and control groups were similar for HPV dose 2 (65% vs. 65%) and HPV dose 3 (35% vs. 30%), respectively. Those who reported provider recommendation of the vaccine were 1.8 times more likely to complete the series. In addition to doctor recommendation, we found that parents who thought that HPV can cause cancer in women were more likely to complete the 3-dose series. Parent knowledge about the relationship between HPV and cancer in women was low for this sample at baseline. Similarly, parents whose main reason for getting their child a HPV vaccine was to protect their child from HPV were more likely to complete the second dose of the vaccine. Up-to-date results will be reported during the presentation. Conclusion: This finding lends itself to the need for education among parents about the relationship of HPV and cancer. These results have implications for selecting communication strategies to reduce HPV-related health disparities. Citation Format: Essie Torres, Alice Richman, Qiang Wu. Communication about HPV: Shared knowledge and HPV vaccine uptake among parents and adolescents in rural eastern North Carolina [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Tenth AACR Conference on the Science of Cancer Health Disparities in Racial/Ethnic Minorities and the Medically Underserved; 2017 Sep 25-28; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2018;27(7 Suppl):Abstract nr B04.
摘要:关于HPV的传播:北卡罗来纳州东部农村家长和青少年之间的知识共享和HPV疫苗接种
虽然预防癌症的疫苗接种是一项重大突破,但吸收率很低。13-17岁女孩的hpv疫苗接种率不理想;在全国范围内,2015年只有63%的人开始,只有42%的人完成了三枪系列。在少数民族、生活贫困和生活在农村地区的女孩中,这一比例要低得多。北卡罗来纳农村县的启动率(17%)是整个州(66%)的一半,而在迄今为止研究的几个北卡罗来纳东部县,启动率甚至更低(11%)。本研究提出的数据,检查HPV知识的父母和他们的孩子,如果更高的知识一致性率影响更大的HPV摄取在青少年中。方法:研究在北卡罗莱纳东部的两个农村诊所进行。研究参与者包括男女英语和西班牙语的父母和他们的孩子(9-17岁),他们没有保险或医疗补助保险。这项研究的数据来自一项更大的研究,该研究评估了电子提醒是否增加了北卡罗来纳州东部青少年中HPV疫苗系列的完成率和青少年父母中HPV知识。在儿童接受第一剂HPV疫苗后,父母和他们的青春期儿童完成了一项基线调查,评估了他们的HPV知识,以及可能影响HPV疫苗接种的因素。在为期2年的研究中,获得了所有青少年参与者的注射记录。最后的样本包括257对亲子二人组。结果:父母和孩子的平均年龄分别为38岁和12岁。大多数被认为是黑人(60%)或西班牙裔(28%),其次是白人(10%)。干预组和对照组在HPV剂量2(65%对65%)和HPV剂量3(35%对30%)的完成率相似。那些报告提供者推荐疫苗的人完成该系列的可能性是后者的1.8倍。除了医生的建议,我们还发现那些认为HPV会导致女性癌症的父母更有可能完成三剂系列。在这个样本中,父母对HPV和女性癌症之间关系的了解在基线时很低。同样,让孩子接种HPV疫苗的主要原因是为了保护孩子免受HPV感染的父母更有可能完成第二剂疫苗的接种。最新的结果将在演示期间报告。结论:这一发现表明有必要对家长进行HPV和癌症之间关系的教育。这些结果对选择沟通策略以减少hpv相关的健康差异具有启示意义。引文格式:Essie Torres, Alice Richman, Qiang Wu。关于HPV的交流:北卡罗来纳州东部农村家长和青少年之间的知识共享和HPV疫苗接种[摘要]。见:第十届AACR会议论文集:种族/少数民族和医疗服务不足人群的癌症健康差异科学;2017年9月25-28日;亚特兰大,乔治亚州。费城(PA): AACR;癌症流行病学杂志,2018;27(7增刊):摘要nr B04。
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