Association of both consistency and strength of self-reported clinician recommendation for HPV vaccination and HPV vaccine uptake among 11- to 12-year-old children. Vaccine. 2017;35(45):6122–8. Article PubMed PubMed Central Google Scholar Forster A, Wardle J, Stephenson J, Waller J. ...
recommendationsandvaccineintroduction.Identifyinganddevelopmentlandscape. andarticulatingvaccinepreferencesthatmeet global healthneedsearlyinproductdevelopmentareTheprimarytargetaudienceforWHOPPCsisanyentity fundamentaltothismission.intendingtodevelopavaccineforuseinLMICsand ...
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection and is associated with many types of cancers that disproportionately impact Hispanics. An HPV vaccine is available for individuals ages 9—45 that can prevent up to 90% of HPV-a
OBJECTIVES: There are disparities in the uptake of HPV vaccine among racial/ethnic minority women. The strongest predictor of HPV vaccine uptake among adult women is health care provider (HCP) recommendation; however, it is unclear how issues relating to race/ethnicity may mitigate these recommendat...
screening services and the strong effect of their recommendation to get vaccinated.36,37 Significant individual factors associated with HPV vaccine uptake included not being in a stable relationship, lower education level, and previous awareness of HPV vaccination indication for adult women or male ...
The committee reviewed a variety of models that looked at the cost effectiveness of different vaccination strategies. This is an important component of what the committee reviews for every vaccine recommendation, but there is not threshold that they use. Male vaccination is most cost effective when ...
Females who previouslycompletedthe 2vHPV or 4vHPV vaccine series may receive the 9vHPV vaccine series. There is no recommendation for or against this practice. Greater protection against the additional HPV types may result. Shared decision-making should be undertaken regarding the potential benefit of...
Awareness.The participants were asked whether they ever heard of cervical cancer, HPV, and the HPV vaccine (1 = ever vs. 0 = never); they were also asked to rate theirperceived likelihood of getting cervical cancer(e.g., very likely, likely, not likely, not likely at all). ...
Gender comparisons indicated women were more likely to have heard of HPV, received the HPV vaccine, and had higher HPV-related knowledge. Health-care providers and mothers were common sources of vaccine recommendation among men and women. Those who identified as white and/or Hispanic and ...
but the recommendation for teen boys and young men only went through age 21. The CDC’s recommendation that children start receiving two doses of the HPV vaccine around 11 or 12 years old has not changed.