Abstract

Objectives: To develop and test a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination intervention that includes healthcare team training activities and patient reminders to reduce missed opportunities and improves the rate of appointment scheduling for HPV vaccination in a rural medical clinic in the United States.Methods: The multi-level and multi-component intervention included healthcare team training activities and the distribution of patient education materials along with technology-based patient HPV vaccination reminders for parents/caregivers and young adult patients. Missed vaccination opportunities were assessed pre- and post-intervention (n = 402 and n = 99, respectively) by retrospective chart review and compared using Pearson χ2. The patient parent/caregiver and young adult patient population (n = 80) was surveyed following the reminder messages and penalized logistic regression quantified unadjusted odds of scheduling a visit.Results: Missed opportunities for HPV vaccination declined significantly from the pre-intervention to the post-intervention period (21.6 vs. 8.1%, respectively, p = 0.002). Participants who recalled receipt of a vaccination reminder had 7.0 (95% CI 2.4–22.8) times higher unadjusted odds of scheduling a visit compared with those who did not recall receiving a reminder. The unadjusted odds of confirming that they had scheduled or were intending to schedule a follow-up appointment to receive the HPV vaccine was 4.9 (95% CI 1.51–20.59) times greater among those who had not received the vaccine for themselves or for their child.Conclusions: Results from this intervention are promising and suggest that vaccination interventions consisting of provider and support staff education and parent/caregiver and patient education materials, and reminders can reduce missed opportunities for vaccinations in rural settings.

Highlights

  • Improving human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine uptake could prevent tens of thousands of cancer cases each year

  • Having any HPV vaccine records on file at the time of visit differed from pre- to post-intervention (22.4 and 43.4%, respectively, p < 0.0001)

  • Neither the number of wellness visits, patients up-todate on an HPV vaccination schedule, patients receiving an HPV vaccination during the visit, nor patients declining a vaccination at the time of visit varied between pre- and post-intervention

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Summary

Introduction

Improving human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine uptake could prevent tens of thousands of cancer cases each year. While HPV vaccination can prevent most HPV-related cancers, more than 20,000 women and 14,000 men are diagnosed with HPV-associated cancers each year in the United States [1]. This is troubling given that HPV vaccination rates remain substantially lower than national targets (80% by 2030 for adolescents aged 13–15) [2]. Only about 54% of adolescents have met this target in more than 13 years after the vaccine was recommended for girls and 8 years after the recommendation for boys [3]. Improving uptake of the HPV vaccine is a public health imperative

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