ASSOCIATION BETWEEN PARENTS’ PERCEPTIONS ABOUT HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS (HPV) AND CORONAVIRUS DISEASE-19 (COVID-19) VACCINES AND THEIR DECISION TO VACCINATE THEIR CHILD AGAINST HPV
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The WHO classified vaccine hesitancy as one of the top ten threats to global
health. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many people had doubt about vaccines. The HPV
can lead to several types of cancer. The COVID-19 impact on US HPV vaccination reluctance
is unknown. Thus, the aim of the study is to investigate parents' perceptions of Coronavirus
Disease-19 (COVID-19), the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, and HPV vaccination
decisions.
METHODS: A cross-sectional observational survey was administered using Qualtrics to
United States parents with at least one child aged 9–18. The survey consisted of five sections:
screening, parent’s perception of general Vaccination, COVID-19, HPV, and demographics.
Rasch analysis was used to evaluate the instrument reliability and validity, which included
principal component analysis (PCA), scale functionality, person measure, item reliability, and
person reliability. A logistic regression model with variables selected using backward
elimination (p<0.05) was used to evaluate the associations between parents’ perception of
COVID-19 and HPV vaccine decisions.
RESULTS: The study included 508 parents. The instrument contained four domains: General
Vaccination, COVID-19, HPV, and Parents’ COVID-19 Experience. Except for General
Vaccination, PCA showed unidimensionality. Response options satisfied scale functionality
analysis. Average person measure was 0.7±8.0 logits. Person reliability was 0.7-0.9, whereas
item reliability was 0.9-1.0. Item fit ranged from 0.7-2.1. A few of the difficult items to endorse
with were I trust social media and/or TV to tell me the truth about vaccines, I would have my
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children vaccinated for COVID-19 if their school required it, vaccinating my child against
HPV helps to protect others from getting HPV, and I believe the COVID-19 vaccine was
approved in a reasonable amount of time. A few of the easy items to endorse were physicians’
address vaccine concerns, there are safe COVID-19 vaccines for children, and I believe in
vaccines. The multivariate logistic regression model with backward elimination showed that
HPV Domain (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.89, 95% CI = 1.61 – 2.21), Parents COVID-19
Experience Domain (AOR = 1.32, 95% CI = 1.18 – 1.47), and men compared to women (AOR
= 2.48, 95% CI = 1.37 – 4.47) were significantly associated with parents’ planning not to
vaccinate their children with HPV.
CONCLUSIONS: Our research offers insight into variables associated with parents’ decisions
about children’s COVID-19 and HPV vaccines. More research is needed to improve the HPV
vaccine uptake.
Description
Keywords
HPV, COVID-19, vaccine, Parents, Decision