News

Racial disparities in HPV vaccine recommendations persist


 

References

BIRMINGHAM, ALA. – Minority adolescent girls are less likely than non-Hispanic white girls to receive a physician recommendation for human papillomavirus vaccination, according to a cross-sectional analysis of 2008-2012 national data from the National Immunization Survey-Teen.

Based on the survey of parents or guardians of 77,320 13-17-year old girls, the weighted proportion of non-Hispanic white girls who received a physician recommendation for HPV vaccination in 2008 was 54%, compared with 43%, 40%, and 47% for non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic other or multiple race girls, respectively.

National Cancer Institute

The study was reported by Dr. Mahbubur Rahman and colleagues from The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston in a poster at the annual meeting of the American Society of Preventive Oncology.

A similar pattern was seen in the remaining years of the study. The weighted proportions for white vs. non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic other or multiple race girls were 60% vs. 50%, 51%, and 56% in 2009, 59% vs. 46%, 48%, and 56% in 2010, 63% vs. 52%, 51%, and 57% in 2011, and 70% vs. 63%, 56%, and 60% in 2012, the investigators said.

After adjustment for demographic characteristics, a separate weighted analysis for each year of data showed the differences between the non-Hispanic white girls and the other groups were statistically significant for all 5 years. The differences between the non-Hispanic black and Hispanic girls were not statistically significant.

The weighted adjusted odds ratio of receiving a physician recommendation for HPV vaccination among minority girls aged 13-17 varied from 0.81 to 0.87, between 2008 and 2012.

The findings confirm those from a 2009 study showing that white women were more likely than minority women to receive a recommendation for HPV vaccination in their adolescent daughters, and confirms that the findings is persistent, rather than a transient phenomenon.

This is notable, because according to 2013 data, HPV vaccine uptake among girls aged 13 to 17 years is lower than the Healthy People 2020 target of 80% for the 3-dose series among those aged 13 to 15 years. It is also below the level needed for herd immunity (75% to 94%), the investigators said, noting that studies show a strong association between provider recommendation and vaccine uptake.

In fact, provider recommendation is the best predictor of vaccine uptake; adolescent girls who receive a provider recommendation are five times more likely to initiate the HPV vaccine series than are those without a recommendation, they said.

“Reasons for racial disparity in receiving a physician recommendation need to be identified and interventions developed to achieve the targeted HPV vaccine uptake among U.S. adolescent girls irrespective of race/ethnicity,” they concluded.

The authors reported having no disclosures.

sworcester@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Sexual abuse education interventions appear effective
MDedge Family Medicine
Nearly all 2015 U.S. measles cases related to travel abroad
MDedge Family Medicine
Helping parents manage rules across two homes
MDedge Family Medicine
Gastric emptying more rapid in adolescents with type 1 diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Medication compliance
MDedge Family Medicine
Dramatic increase in teen use of e-cigs, hookahs
MDedge Family Medicine
Lower DMPA dose provides comparable efficacy, tolerability in adolescents
MDedge Family Medicine
Preliminary analysis confirms birth defect-cancer association
MDedge Family Medicine
Most accidental genital trauma cases manageable in ED
MDedge Family Medicine
Send kids home 2 hours after food challenge testing
MDedge Family Medicine