학술논문

“If People Were Told About the Cancer, They’d Want to Get Vaccinated”: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs About HPV Vaccination Among Mid-Adult Men
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Men's Health. 17(1)
Subject
Gender Studies
Public Health
Health Sciences
Human Society
Prevention
Clinical Research
Vaccine Related
Behavioral and Social Science
Infectious Diseases
Cancer
Immunization
Sexually Transmitted Infections
HPV and/or Cervical Cancer Vaccines
Management of diseases and conditions
3.4 Vaccines
7.1 Individual care needs
Prevention of disease and conditions
and promotion of well-being
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Male
Adolescent
Adult
Humans
Papillomavirus Infections
Health Knowledge
Attitudes
Practice
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Vaccination
Neoplasms
Papillomavirus Vaccines
HPV vaccination
human papillomavirus
men
United States
Public Health and Health Services
Public health
Gender studies
Language
Abstract
In 2018, nine-valent human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine eligibility expanded to include adults aged 27 to 45. This study aimed to identify knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs (KABs) about HPV and HPV vaccination among newly eligible mid-adult men, for whom uptake in adolescence and younger adulthood remains suboptimal. We conducted six virtual focus groups (N = 34 participants) with unvaccinated men aged 27 to 45 living in Southern California's Inland Empire. Data were systematically analyzed to identify emergent themes using the rigorous and accelerated data reduction technique. The sample of men was diverse (79% Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black, Asian, or mixed race/ethnicity; 26% gay or bisexual) and captured participants from across the socioeconomic spectrum. Eighty-eight percent of participants had never received a provider recommendation to be vaccinated against HPV. Many had unanswered questions about HPV and HPV vaccination, could not recall any HPV-related cancers that affect men, and were unaware of their current eligibility for vaccination. Embarrassment and stigma surrounding vaccination against a sexually transmitted infection, concerns about vaccine side effects and safety, and preferences for preventing HPV via "safer sex" and monogamy were salient barriers to vaccination. Nevertheless, many men were eager to learn more about HPV vaccination and engage with health care providers around that topic. Interventions aimed at improving men's knowledge, changing social norms, and supporting health providers to identify HPV vaccine-eligible patients may be especially fruitful for facilitating shared clinical decision-making between mid-adult men and their health care providers.