Attitudes, healthcare interactions, and communication preferences for HPV vaccines among hesitant Hispanic/Latinx parents: how does this compare with influenza and COVID-19 vaccines?

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES Ethnicity & Health Pub Date : 2024-10-22 DOI:10.1080/13557858.2024.2417382
Carolina Gomez Grimaldi, Elizabeth C Stewart, Kathryn Edwards, Claudia Barajas, Jennifer Cunningham-Erves
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Abstract

Objective: We explored HPV vaccine concerns and healthcare provider communication among Hispanic/Latinx hesitant parents during the COVID-19 pandemic, and how those concerns and provider communications compared for influenza and COVID-19 vaccines. As a secondary aim, we explored communication needs and strategies for these recommended vaccines.

Design: We applied a concurrent, multi-method study design (survey and interview) with 23 Hispanic/Latinx American parents of adolescents aged 11-18 years. An inductive deductive thematic approach was used to interpret interview data. Descriptives were used to analyze survey data.

Results: Overall, most parents (77%) perceived that their child was receiving too many vaccines. Regarding hesitancy for the HPV vaccine, major parental concerns related to vaccine effectiveness (83%), vaccine necessity (83%), and vaccine safety (80%). For the COVID vaccine, major concerns were the newness of vaccine (83%), vaccine safety (77%), low perceived effectiveness (77%), and low perceived need (77%). For influenza vaccines, major parental concerns were vaccine safety (73%), low perceived need (73%), and preference for natural over vaccine-induced immunity (73%). Parents had overall positive views towards vaccination. Some parents prioritized school-required vaccines, and others ranked the recommended vaccines- HPV, COVID-19, and influenza vaccines- for their children. They saw the benefits of recommended vaccines; however, there were concerns. The majority received a provider's recommendation for HPV vaccination for their child, while over half had not received a recommendation for COVID-19 and influenza vaccines. Recommended communication strategies were diverse with parents highlighting the need for providers to capitalize on waiting and clinic rooms to provide education.

Conclusion: Healthcare providers should take advantage of missed opportunities, improve healthcare interactions with a strong recommendation and persistent communication, and offer diverse communication strategies and messaging for vaccines. Future work should further explore multi-vaccine concerns and how addressing these concerns through healthcare-provider communication could improve HPV vaccination along with COVID-19 and influenza vaccination.

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犹豫不决的西班牙裔/拉美裔家长对 HPV 疫苗的态度、医疗保健互动和沟通偏好:与流感和 COVID-19 疫苗相比如何?
目的:我们探讨了在 COVID-19 疫苗大流行期间,HPV 疫苗在西班牙裔/拉美裔犹豫不决的家长中的关注点和医疗服务提供者之间的沟通情况,以及这些关注点和医疗服务提供者之间的沟通情况与流感疫苗和 COVID-19 疫苗之间的比较。其次,我们还探讨了这些推荐疫苗的沟通需求和策略:我们对 23 位 11-18 岁青少年的西班牙裔/拉美裔美国父母进行了同步、多方法研究设计(调查和访谈)。我们采用归纳演绎的主题方法来解释访谈数据。结果:总体而言,大多数家长(77%)认为他们的孩子接种了太多疫苗。关于对人类乳头瘤病毒(HPV)疫苗的犹豫不决,家长们主要关注疫苗的有效性(83%)、疫苗的必要性(83%)和疫苗的安全性(80%)。对于 COVID 疫苗,家长的主要顾虑是疫苗的新颖性(83%)、疫苗的安全性(77%)、有效性低(77%)和必要性低(77%)。对于流感疫苗,家长的主要顾虑是疫苗的安全性(73%)、低需求感(73%)以及更倾向于自然免疫而非疫苗诱导免疫(73%)。家长对疫苗接种的总体看法是积极的。一些家长优先接种学校要求接种的疫苗,另一些家长则为其子女接种推荐疫苗--HPV、COVID-19 和流感疫苗。他们看到了推荐疫苗的益处,但也有顾虑。大多数家长都收到了医疗服务提供者为其子女接种人乳头瘤病毒疫苗的建议,而超过一半的家长没有收到接种 COVID-19 和流感疫苗的建议。建议的沟通策略多种多样,家长们强调医疗服务提供者需要利用候诊室和诊室提供教育:结论:医疗服务提供者应利用错失的机会,通过强有力的推荐和持续的沟通来改善医疗服务互动,并为疫苗提供多样化的沟通策略和信息。未来的工作应进一步探讨多种疫苗的问题,以及如何通过医疗保健提供者的沟通来解决这些问题,从而提高 HPV 疫苗接种率以及 COVID-19 和流感疫苗接种率。
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来源期刊
Ethnicity & Health
Ethnicity & Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ethnicity & Health is an international academic journal designed to meet the world-wide interest in the health of ethnic groups. It embraces original papers from the full range of disciplines concerned with investigating the relationship between ’ethnicity’ and ’health’ (including medicine and nursing, public health, epidemiology, social sciences, population sciences, and statistics). The journal also covers issues of culture, religion, gender, class, migration, lifestyle and racism, in so far as they relate to health and its anthropological and social aspects.
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