4.5 Article

Barriers to and facilitators of human papillomavirus vaccination in an ethnically diverse group of migrant parents: A qualitative mixed methods study

Journal

HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2023.2269721

Keywords

Human papillomavirus vaccination; HPV immunization; HPV vaccine; preventable cancers; immigrants; refugees; migrants; HPV vaccine uptake factors; barriers; facilitators

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Disparities in HPVV uptake among immigrants and refugees are primarily due to barriers such as lack of information, awareness, education, and vaccine logistics. A multi-component intervention involving educating parents, vaccinating children, and training staff in school-based programs is crucial for improving HPV immunization rates in these subgroups.
A disparity in the uptake of the Human papillomavirus vaccine (HPVV) among immigrants and refugees leads to a social gradient in health. Recognizing that immigrants and refugees may encounter unique barriers to accessing prevention and care, this study seeks to determine barriers to and facilitators of HPVV among these subgroups to uncover high-resolution quality improvement targets of investment for under-immunized pockets of the population. The study undertook a qualitative inquiry into understanding immigrant and refugee parents' perspectives on HPV infection and HPVV experience through school-based programs. We collected data first through short online surveys (N = 15) followed by one-on-one interviews (N = 15) and then through detailed online surveys (N = 16) followed by focus group discussions (N = 3) with 4-6 participants per group discussion from different groups: Black, South Asian and West Asian. Analysis of surveys and interviews identified that: information, awareness, and education about HPV infection and HPVV were among the most cited barriers that impede the uptake of HPVV. Moreover, vaccine-related logistics were equally important, including not having immunization information packages in different languages and relying solely on the child to bring home packages in paper copies from school-based vaccine programs. A multi-component intervention remains instrumental in enhancing HPV immunization rates, given the inconsistent uptake of HPVV by these subgroups who voice unique barriers and facilitators. An educational campaign that involves educating parents who consent for their child(ren) for HPVV, the children receiving the vaccination, and training staff providing HPVV through school-based immunization programs would be paramount.

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