Factors affecting caregivers’ HPV vaccination decisions for adolescent girls: A secondary analysis of a Chinese RCT
Ying Yang, Yajiao Lu, Yifan Li, Chuanyu Qin, Yu He, Wenfeng Gong, Shenglan Tang, Dan Wu, Jing Li, Omar Enzo Santangelo, Omar Enzo Santangelo, Omar Enzo Santangelo, Omar Enzo Santangelo, Omar Enzo Santangelo

TL;DR
This study explores what influences caregivers in China to vaccinate their daughters against HPV, finding that a 'pay-it-forward' approach and caregivers' knowledge and intentions significantly impact vaccination rates.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel 'pay-it-forward' intervention to boost HPV vaccination rates and identifies key caregiver-related factors influencing uptake.
Findings
The pay-it-forward intervention increased vaccination rates by more than twofold compared to standard care.
Caregivers who were previously unaware of the HPV vaccine were three times more likely to vaccinate their daughters.
Unemployed or retired caregivers had daughters with nearly four times higher vaccination rates than those with employed caregivers.
Abstract
Despite the HPV vaccine’s effectiveness against cervical cancer, uptake among adolescent girls in China remains low, with caregivers playing a crucial role in vaccination decisions. This study investigates factors influencing caregivers’ action to vaccinate their adolescent daughters. Pay-it-forward is a novel model that motivates participants in adopting healthy behaviors and making community contributions. In this study, it offers an individual a free shot of HPV vaccine and then asks whether they would like to donate to support another person to get the same vaccination. This study was embedded in a two-arm randomized controlled trial in China. Potential associated factors were identified based on Anderson’s Health Service Utilization Behavioral Model and analyzed through univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression. Caregivers’ information, knowledge, attitudes, vaccine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCervical Cancer and HPV Research · Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · Hepatitis B Virus Studies
