Quality of Physician Communication about HPV Vaccine-Response.
نویسندگان
چکیده
We thank Osazuwa-Peters et al. (1) for their letter. While health professionals from various specialties can play a role in supporting adolescent immunization, primary care physicians are the most appropriate target for quality improvement efforts related to human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine delivery. In our study, we surveyed a national sample of pediatricians and family physicianswith the goal of understanding how they communicate about HPV vaccination for 11to 12-year-old patients (2). Our focus was intentional. Preteens are the age group that national guidelines prioritize for routine HPV vaccination, and in the United States, pediatricians and family physicians provide about 90% of the HPV vaccine doses administered to adolescents (3). In contrast, dentists currently deliver 0% of HPV vaccine doses, and unfortunately, our research suggests that this situation is unlikely to change in the near future. In a recent literature review, we found that dental offices were poorly suited for serving as alternative settings for HPV vaccination (4). Despite being highly skilled and having excellent access to adolescent patients, dentists lack the systems, procedures, and policies for HPV vaccine storage and handling, administration, or billing. Furthermore, unlike pharmacies and perhaps even schools, dental offices are unfamiliar as a vaccination site and likely have limited capacity to provide HPV vaccine concomitantly with other adolescent vaccines. Given the many complex structural barriers to HPV vaccine provision by dentists and the urgent need to increase coverage, improving vaccine delivery by pediatricians and family physicians must take priority over efforts to establish dentists in an entirely new role. If dentists are unlikely to be vaccine providers, could they support HPV vaccination indirectly by recommending that adolescents seek vaccination elsewhere? As trusted health care providers, dentists' recommendations would likely be convincing to some parents. However, as our research demonstrates, training providers to communicate effectively about HPV vaccination is not easy (2, 5). Furthermore, dentists may not view counseling patients about HPV vaccination as consistent with their role (6). Because resources and motivation for engaging in health care quality improvement are limited, leaders in dental health should carefully consider whether their efforts might be better spent promoting other cancer-related activities, such as oropharyngeal cancer screening. Not only can dentists perform this service directly, but mechanisms already exist for reimbursing them. There is no question that dentists are valuable partners in cancer prevention and control. We should make the best use of their considerable skills and the limited resources of the health care system by targeting their efforts where they can do the most good.
منابع مشابه
Quality of physician communication about human papillomavirus vaccine: findings from a national survey.
BACKGROUND Improving the quality of physicians' recommendations for human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination is critical to addressing low coverage. Thus, we sought to describe HPV vaccine communication practices among primary care physicians. METHODS Pediatricians and family physicians (n = 776) completed our national online survey in 2014. We assessed the quality of their HPV vaccine recommen...
متن کاملPhysician communication about adolescent vaccination: How is human papillomavirus vaccine different?
BACKGROUND Low human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination coverage stands in stark contrast to our success in delivering other adolescent vaccines. To identify opportunities for improving physicians' recommendations for HPV vaccination, we sought to understand how the communication context surrounding adolescent vaccination varies by vaccine type. METHODS A national sample of 776 U.S. physicians ...
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In this issue of American Family Physician, Ackerman and Serrano provide a concise and well-referenced summary of the recommended immunizations for children and adolescents.1 The immunization schedule is designed to create the best immunologic response and achieve maximal disease prevention. However, full adherence to the schedule is jeopardized by the fears of some parents and physicians who h...
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BACKGROUND Receiving a healthcare provider's recommendation is a strong predictor of HPV vaccination, but little is known empirically about which types of recommendation are most influential. Thus, we sought to investigate the relationship between recommendation quality and HPV vaccination among U.S. adolescents. METHODS In 2014, we conducted a national, online survey of 1495 parents of 11-17...
متن کاملMissed clinical opportunities: provider recommendations for HPV vaccination for 11-12 year old girls are limited.
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of physician recommendation of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination in early (ages 11-12), middle (13-17), and late adolescent/young adult (18-26) female patients by physician specialty, and to identify factors associated with recommendation in early adolescents. METHODS A 38-item survey was conducted April 2009 through Aug...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology
دوره 25 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2016