Purpose: To evaluate pediatric dentists' and dental residents' knowledge, attitudes, and practices toward human papillomavirus (HPV) education and vaccination anticipatory guidance.
Results: Of 7,960 surveys sent, the total response rate was 7.7%. Only 6.3% of respondents regularly provide HPV vaccination anticipatory guidance, and 56.8% never discuss the HPV vaccine. Those who practice in an academic dental school setting were almost 4 times more likely and those who felt they had adequate training and knowledge or who have an electronic health record prompt for HPV vaccine status were 2 times more likely to provide regular HPV anticipatory guidance. Other correlates with increased regular provision of HPV anticipatory guidance were older age, greater knowledge, awareness of the age recommendations for HPV vaccination, familiarity with the ADA or AAPD policy statements, and greater comfort (indicated by a lower comfort score).
Conclusions: The survey results suggest pediatric dentists and pediatric dental residents rarely provide HPV anticipatory guidance, a missed public health opportunity for increasing vaccination rates and an opportunity for dental educators.Knowledge Transfer Statement:This article aims to inform dentists and dental educators about human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine anticipatory guidance.
期刊介绍:
JDR Clinical & Translational Research seeks to publish the highest quality research articles on clinical and translational research including all of the dental specialties and implantology. Examples include behavioral sciences, cariology, oral & pharyngeal cancer, disease diagnostics, evidence based health care delivery, human genetics, health services research, periodontal diseases, oral medicine, radiology, and pathology. The JDR Clinical & Translational Research expands on its research content by including high-impact health care and global oral health policy statements and systematic reviews of clinical concepts affecting clinical practice. Unique to the JDR Clinical & Translational Research are advances in clinical and translational medicine articles created to focus on research with an immediate potential to affect clinical therapy outcomes.