Health Expectations (Oct 2023)

Co‐development of a school‐based and primary care‐based multicomponent intervention to improve HPV vaccine coverage amongst French adolescents (the PrevHPV Study)

  • Aurélie Bocquier,
  • Sébastien Bruel,
  • Morgane Michel,
  • Anne‐Sophie Le Duc‐Banaszuk,
  • Stéphanie Bonnay,
  • Marion Branchereau,
  • Karine Chevreul,
  • Sandra Chyderiotis,
  • Aurélie Gauchet,
  • Bruno Giraudeau,
  • Dragos‐Paul Hagiu,
  • Judith E. Mueller,
  • Amandine Gagneux‐Brunon,
  • Nathalie Thilly,
  • PrevHPV Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13778
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 5
pp. 1843 – 1853

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Introduction Despite various efforts to improve human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine coverage in France, it has always been lower than in most other high‐income countries. The health authorities launched in 2018 the national PrevHPV research programme to (1) co‐develop with stakeholders and (2) evaluate the impact of a multicomponent complex intervention aimed at improving HPV vaccine coverage amongst French adolescents. Objective To describe the development process of the PrevHPV intervention using the GUIDance for rEporting of intervention Development framework as a guide. Methods To develop the intervention, we used findings from (1) published evidence on effective strategies to improve vaccination uptake and on theoretical frameworks of health behaviour change; (2) primary data on target populations' knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, preferences, behaviours and practices as well as the facilitators and barriers to HPV vaccination collected as part of the PrevHPV Programme and (3) the advice of working groups involving stakeholders in a participatory approach. We paid attention to developing an intervention that would maximise reach, adoption, implementation and maintenance in real‐world contexts. Results We co‐developed three components: (1) adolescents' and parents' education and motivation using eHealth tools (web conferences, videos, and a serious video game) and participatory learning at school; (2) general practitioners' e‐learning training on HPV using motivational interviewing techniques and provision of a decision aid tool and (3) easier access to vaccination through vaccination days organised on participating middle schools' premises to propose free of charge initiation of the HPV vaccination. Conclusion We co‐developed a multicomponent intervention that addresses a range of barriers and enablers of HPV vaccination. The next step is to build on the results of its evaluation to refine it before scaling it up if proven efficient. If so, it will add to the small number of multicomponent interventions aimed at improving HPV vaccination worldwide. Patient or Public Contribution The public (adolescents, their parents, school staff and health professionals) participated in the needs assessment using a mixed methods approach. The public was also involved in the components' development process to generate ideas about potential activities/tools, critically revise the successive versions of the tools and provide advice about the intervention practicalities, feasibility and maintenance.

Keywords