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Articles

Hispanic mothers’ accounts of vaccinating their adolescent children against HPV: features of the clinic visit

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Pages 337-351 | Received 15 Dec 2017, Accepted 13 Aug 2018, Published online: 24 Aug 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Objective: Despite the widespread availability of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in the US, rates of vaccination among Hispanic adolescents lag behind those of other recommended vaccines. Understanding what happens during the HPV vaccination visit should provide important insight into communication between health care providers and Hispanic mothers and identifies areas where communication can be improved. As such, this qualitative study explored Hispanic mothers’ experiences during their adolescent child’s HPV vaccination visit.

Design: Fifty-one participants completed individual interviews. Transcripts were analyzed using a conventional content analysis approach to identify emergent categories or themes.

Results: We identified three features of the HPV vaccination visit including: the primary reason for the visit, the type of counseling the mother received about the vaccine and the type of HPV vaccine recommendation received. Most mothers reported that their child was vaccinated against HPV at a routine well-child visit. Some mothers reported that they received in-depth counseling about the vaccine, while others received brief or no counseling from the provider. Mothers also reported receiving either a strong recommendation to vaccinate, a recommendation to vaccinate that emphasized her choice, or no recommendation to vaccinate.

Conclusion: Most Hispanic mothers report that they received counseling and a recommendation from their adolescent child’s health care provider before vaccinating. However, most of the mothers first heard about the HPV vaccine at the vaccination visit. Mothers who had previously heard about the vaccine outside of the clinic, reported making an appointment specifically for their child to be vaccinated against HPV. Together, these findings indicate a need to raise awareness of the vaccine and to promote HPV vaccination more strongly in this population. Education efforts should target mothers in community settings, in addition to clinic settings in order to increase awareness and vaccination in this population.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by: NIH/NCI [Grant no K01CA181437] and NIH/NIAAA [grant no K01 AA025992].

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