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Increase in Kids Who Are Getting the HPV Vaccine

According to the CDC, the rate of teenagers who receive at least 1 dose of the HPV vaccine has significantly increased, creating major declines in new infections.


 

The HPV vaccine has led to “dramatic declines” in HPV infections, according to the CDC. Since the first HPV vaccine was introduced 10 years ago, the percentage of infections that cause cancers and genital warts has dropped by 71% among teenage girls and 61% among young women. According to the annual National Immunization Survey-Teen report, 60% of teens aged 13 to 17 years received ≥ 1 doses of HPV vaccine in 2016, up 4 percentage points from 2015.

More boys are getting the vaccine, too. About 56% of boys received their first dose (although that is still less than the 65% seen in girls)—representing a 6% increase from 2015; rates for girls remained stable.

As encouraging as those numbers are, there is more work to do, the CDC says. Although most adolescents have received the first dose, only 43% are up-to-date on all the recommended doses. The CDC recommends that 11- to 12-year-olds get 2 doses of HPV vaccine at least 6 months apart. The CDC updated its HPV vaccine recommendations in 2016 when new evidence showed that 2 doses of the vaccine provided levels of protection similar to those seen for 3 doses in older adolescents and young adults.

Parents can get the vaccine for their child during any doctor’s visit, but the CDC recommends that adolescents get the HPV vaccine during the same visit that they get whooping cough and meningitis vaccine.

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