Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics (Jan 2023)

Parents’ stigmatizing beliefs about the HPV vaccine and their association with information seeking behavior and vaccination communication behaviors

  • Ashley Hedrick McKenzie,
  • Ross Shegog,
  • Lara S. Savas,
  • C. Mary Healy,
  • L. Aubree Shay,
  • Sharice Preston,
  • Sharon Coan,
  • Travis Teague,
  • Erica Frost,
  • Stanley W. Spinner,
  • Sally W. Vernon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2023.2214054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1

Abstract

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Parents’ stigmatizing beliefs about the HPV vaccine, such as beliefs that it promotes adolescent sexual activity, constitute a notable barrier to vaccine uptake. The purpose of this study is to describe the associations between parents’ stigmatizing beliefs about the HPV vaccine, psychosocial antecedents to vaccination, and parents’ intentions to vaccinate their children. Parents of vaccine-eligible children (n = 512) were surveyed in a large urban clinical network. Results indicate that two stigmatizing beliefs were significantly associated with self-efficacy in talking with a doctor about the HPV vaccine. Believing that the vaccine would make a child more likely to have sex was associated with citing social media as a source of information about the vaccine. Other stigmatizing beliefs were either associated with citing healthcare professionals as sources of information about the vaccine, or they were not significantly associated with any information source. This finding suggests that stigmatizing beliefs might discourage parents from seeking out information about the vaccine. This study is significant because it further highlights the importance of doctor recommendations to all patients at recommended ages; doctor visits may represent one of the few opportunities to normalize HPV vaccination and address parents’ stigmatizing beliefs about the HPV vaccine.

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