Factors that influence caregivers' and adolescents' views and practices regarding human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination for adolescents: a qualitative evidence synthesis.

IF 8.8 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Sara Cooper, Bey-Marrié Schmidt, Ngcwalisa A Jama, Jill Ryan, Natalie Leon, Edison J Mavundza, Rosemary J Burnett, Asahngwa Constantine Tanywe, Charles S Wiysonge
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination in adolescents provides a powerful tool for preventing cervical cancer in women and other HPV-associated diseases in people of all genders. HPV vaccines have been progressively introduced in many countries. However, worldwide, many adolescents do not receive HPV vaccination, for various reasons. The HPV vaccine might be costly or unavailable, healthcare systems might lack capacity for its delivery, or adolescent health might not be prioritised. Some caregivers and adolescents may not accept available HPV vaccines and vaccination services. We currently lack a comprehensive understanding of the factors that influence HPV vaccination views and practices, and why some caregivers and adolescents may be less accepting of the vaccine. Qualitative research can contribute to this understanding and help inform policy and practice, including the development of more relevant, acceptable and effective interventions to promote public acceptance and uptake of HPV vaccination in adolescents. This qualitative evidence synthesis supplements a Cochrane review of the effectiveness of interventions to improve uptake of adolescent vaccination, including HPV vaccination.

Objectives: The objectives of the review are to identify, appraise, and synthesise qualitative studies that explore caregivers' or adolescents' views, experiences, practices, intentions, decision-making, acceptance, hesitancy, or nonacceptance of HPV vaccination; to gain an understanding of the factors that influence caregiver and adolescent views and practices regarding HPV vaccination for adolescents; and to explore how the findings of this review can enhance our understanding of the related Cochrane intervention review.

Search methods: We searched MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, PsycInfo, and Scopus for eligible studies (February 2023). We updated this search in October 2024, but these results have not yet been fully incorporated.

Selection criteria: We included studies that utilised qualitative methods for data collection and analysis; focused on caregivers' or adolescents' views, practices, acceptance, hesitancy, or refusal of HPV vaccination for adolescents aged 9 to 19 years of age; and were from any setting globally where HPV vaccination is provided.

Data collection and analysis: We used a prespecified sampling frame to capture a sample of eligible studies that were from a range of geographical and income-level settings, were conceptually rich in relation to the review's phenomenon of interest, and included HPV vaccination for diverse genders. We extracted contextual and methodological data from each sampled study. We used a thematic synthesis approach to analyse the evidence. We assessed methodological limitations using a list of criteria used in previous Cochrane reviews and originally based on the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme quality assessment tool for qualitative studies. We used the GRADE-CERQual (Confidence in the Evidence from Reviews of Qualitative research) approach to assess our confidence in each review finding. We integrated the findings of this review with those from the related Cochrane review of intervention effectiveness (by Abdullahi and colleagues), by mapping whether the trial interventions reflected or targeted the factors identified by this review as influencing caregivers' or adolescents' views and practices regarding HPV vaccination.

Main results: We included 206 studies in the review and sampled 71 of these for our synthesis. Of these, 35 studies were conducted in high-income countries, 26 studies in middle-income countries, 8 studies in low-income countries, and 2 studies in multiple-income settings. Studies came from all six World Health Organization (WHO) regions and included urban and rural settings. We downgraded our confidence in several findings, mainly due to concerns about how the studies were conducted (methodological limitations), concerns about perspectives lacking from some types of participants or in some settings (relevance), or because of variability in the data or insufficient evidence to support all aspects of a review finding (coherence). Many complex factors were found to influence caregivers' and adolescents' HPV vaccination views and practices, which we categorised into eight overarching themes: 1) A lack of biomedical knowledge; 2) Perceptions of a range of interrelated risks and benefits (or lack thereof) associated with HPV vaccination; 3) Routine responses to vaccination generally or more specific views or experiences of other vaccines and vaccination programmes; 4) Complex nuclear familial decision-making dynamics; 5) Extended familial and social relations and networks, particularly extended family members, peers, traditional or religious leaders, and the media; 6) Interrelated socio-cultural beliefs and practices regarding adolescence, sexuality, gender, parenting and health; 7) Trust or distrust in the institutions, systems or experts associated with vaccination, most particularly teachers and the school, the pharmaceutical industry, government, science and biomedicine, and healthcare professionals; and 8) Access to, and experiences of, HPV vaccination programmes and delivery services, such as the convenience (or lack thereof) of HPV vaccination services, the cost of the vaccine, language barriers, the feminisation of HPV vaccination programmes and procedural aspects of school-based vaccination delivery. We did not identify any major differences in the occurrence of these overarching themes between subgroups. However, for various subthemes certain differences emerged in relation to place, gender and socio-economic status, and between caregivers and adolescents. The interventions tested in the related Cochrane review of intervention effectiveness most commonly targeted caregivers' and adolescents' lack of biomedical knowledge and their perceptions of the risks and benefits of HPV vaccination, with the other influencing factors identified by our review being underrepresented.

Authors' conclusions: Our review reveals that caregivers' and adolescents' HPV vaccination views and practices are not only influenced by issues related to individual knowledge and perceptions of the vaccine, but also an array of more complex, contextual factors and meanings: social, political, economic, structural, and moral. Successful development of interventions to promote the acceptance and uptake of HPV vaccination for adolescents requires an understanding of the context-specific factors that influence HPV vaccination views and practices in the target setting. Through this, more tailored and in turn more relevant, acceptable, and effective responses could be developed. The eight overarching themes that emerged from our review could serve as a basis for gaining this understanding.

影响照顾者和青少年对青少年人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种的看法和做法的因素:定性证据综合。
背景:青少年人乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗接种为预防女性宫颈癌和所有性别人群中其他HPV相关疾病提供了强有力的工具。人乳头瘤病毒疫苗已在许多国家逐步推广。然而,在世界范围内,由于各种原因,许多青少年没有接种HPV疫苗。HPV疫苗可能价格昂贵或无法获得,卫生保健系统可能缺乏提供疫苗的能力,或者青少年健康可能没有得到优先考虑。一些照顾者和青少年可能不接受现有的HPV疫苗和疫苗接种服务。我们目前缺乏对影响HPV疫苗接种观点和做法的因素的全面了解,以及为什么一些照顾者和青少年可能不太接受疫苗。定性研究可以促进这种理解,并有助于为政策和实践提供信息,包括制定更相关、更可接受和更有效的干预措施,以促进公众接受和接受青少年接种HPV疫苗。这一定性证据综合补充了Cochrane关于改善青少年疫苗接种(包括HPV疫苗接种)的干预措施有效性的综述。目的:本综述的目的是识别、评价和综合探讨照顾者或青少年对HPV疫苗接种的看法、经验、做法、意图、决策、接受、犹豫或不接受的定性研究;了解影响照顾者和青少年对青少年HPV疫苗接种的看法和做法的因素;并探讨本综述的发现如何增强我们对相关Cochrane干预综述的理解。检索方法:我们检索了MEDLINE、Embase、CINAHL、PsycInfo和Scopus等符合条件的研究(2023年2月)。我们在2024年10月更新了这一搜索,但这些结果尚未完全纳入。选择标准:我们纳入了使用定性方法进行数据收集和分析的研究;重点关注照顾者或青少年对9至19岁青少年HPV疫苗接种的看法、做法、接受、犹豫或拒绝;并且来自全球提供HPV疫苗接种的任何环境。数据收集和分析:我们使用预先指定的抽样框架来获取符合条件的研究样本,这些研究来自一系列地理和收入水平设置,与综述感兴趣的现象相关的概念丰富,并包括不同性别的HPV疫苗接种。我们从每个抽样研究中提取上下文和方法学数据。我们使用主题综合方法来分析证据。我们使用之前Cochrane综述中使用的一系列标准来评估方法学的局限性,这些标准最初是基于用于定性研究的Critical Appraisal Skills program质量评估工具。我们使用GRADE-CERQual(对定性研究综述证据的置信度)方法来评估我们对每个综述发现的置信度。我们将这篇综述的结果与相关的Cochrane干预有效性综述(由Abdullahi及其同事撰写)的结果进行整合,通过绘制试验干预是否反映或针对本综述确定的影响护理者或青少年对HPV疫苗接种的看法和做法的因素。主要结果:我们在综述中纳入了206项研究,并从中选取了71项用于我们的综合。其中,35项研究在高收入国家进行,26项研究在中等收入国家进行,8项研究在低收入国家进行,2项研究在多收入环境中进行。研究来自世界卫生组织(世卫组织)所有六个区域,包括城市和农村环境。我们降低了对几项研究结果的信心,主要是由于对研究进行方式的担忧(方法学上的局限性),对某些类型的参与者或某些环境缺乏观点的担忧(相关性),或由于数据的可变性或证据不足以支持综述发现的所有方面(一致性)。 许多复杂的因素被发现影响照顾者和青少年的HPV疫苗接种观点和做法,我们将其分为八个总体主题:1)缺乏生物医学知识;2)对与HPV疫苗接种相关的一系列相关风险和益处(或缺乏风险和益处)的认识;3)对疫苗接种的一般常规反应或对其他疫苗和疫苗接种规划的更具体的看法或经验;4)复杂的核心家族决策动力学;5)广泛的家庭和社会关系和网络,特别是大家庭成员、同龄人、传统或宗教领袖以及媒体;6)有关青春期、性行为、性别、养育子女和健康的相互关联的社会文化信仰和做法;7)信任或不信任与疫苗接种有关的机构、系统或专家,尤其是教师和学校、制药业、政府、科学和生物医学以及卫生保健专业人员;8) HPV疫苗接种规划和提供服务的可及性和经验,例如HPV疫苗接种服务的便利性(或缺乏便利性)、疫苗的成本、语言障碍、HPV疫苗接种规划的女性化以及以学校为基础的疫苗接种的程序方面。我们没有发现亚组之间这些总体主题的发生有任何重大差异。然而,对于各种分主题,在地点、性别和社会经济地位方面以及在照顾者和青少年之间出现了某些差异。在Cochrane相关的干预有效性综述中,测试的干预措施最常见的目标是看护者和青少年缺乏生物医学知识,以及他们对HPV疫苗接种风险和益处的认识,而我们的综述确定的其他影响因素被低估。作者的结论:我们的综述显示,照顾者和青少年的HPV疫苗接种观点和做法不仅受到与疫苗的个人知识和观念相关的问题的影响,而且还受到一系列更复杂的背景因素和意义的影响:社会、政治、经济、结构和道德。要想成功地制定干预措施,促进青少年接受和接受HPV疫苗接种,就需要了解影响目标设定中HPV疫苗接种观点和做法的具体环境因素。通过这种方式,可以制定更有针对性、更相关、更可接受和更有效的对策。从我们的审查中出现的八个总体主题可以作为获得这种理解的基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.60
自引率
2.40%
发文量
173
审稿时长
1-2 weeks
期刊介绍: The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR) stands as the premier database for systematic reviews in healthcare. It comprises Cochrane Reviews, along with protocols for these reviews, editorials, and supplements. Owned and operated by Cochrane, a worldwide independent network of healthcare stakeholders, the CDSR (ISSN 1469-493X) encompasses a broad spectrum of health-related topics, including health services.
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