A Qualitative Study of Social Processes, HPV Vaccine Attitudes, and Vaccination Behavior Among Hesitant Adopter Parents.

Journal: Clinical Pediatrics
Published:
Abstract

Despite the availability of a highly effective human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, uptake remains below Healthy People 2030 targets, particularly in rural areas where HPV-related cancers are more prevalent. This study aimed to explore how social processes influence parents' HPV vaccination decisions, focusing on vaccine-hesitant parents who vaccinated their child(ren) against HPV despite their hesitancy, eg, "hesitant adopters." We conducted a qualitative exploratory analysis of in-depth interviews with hesitant adopter parents (n = 8) to explore how social interactions with trusted interlocutors influenced their decision-making. Hesitant adopter parents identified relevant professional expertise, direct experience with the HPV vaccine, and social proximity to interlocutors as influential factors. We argue that rather than a single moment or decision, vaccination decision-making is a dynamic, ongoing process affected by social processes. This study adds nuance to our understanding of how prior vaccination behavior functions in future vaccine acceptance.

Authors
Ramey Moore, Rachel Purvis, Don Willis, Ji Li, Sara Sorrell, Simon Lee, Erin Finley, Kevin Sexton, Shashank Kraleti, C'asia James, Pearl Mcelfish