1. Understanding medical mistrust and HPV vaccine hesitancy among multiethnic parents in Los Angeles
- Author
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Tsui, Jennifer, Martinez, Bibiana, Shin, Michelle B., Allee-Munoz, Alec, Rodriguez, Ivonne, Navarro, Jazmin, and Thomas-Barrios, Kim R.
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Los Angeles, California -- Health policy ,Parents -- Demographic aspects -- Beliefs, opinions and attitudes -- Health aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Determinants of parental HPV vaccine hesitancy, including medical mistrust and exposure to negative vaccine information, are understudied in racial/ethnic minority communities where vaccine uptake is low. We conducted a cross-sectional survey (March 2021) among parents of adolescents, ages 9-17 years, from an academic enrichment program serving low-income, first-generation, underrepresented minority families in Los Angeles to understand determinants of parental HPV vaccine hesitancy. Parents completed self-administered surveys, including a 9-item HPV vaccine hesitancy scale, in either English, Spanish, or Chinese. Logistic regression was used to identify individual and interpersonal factors associated with parental hesitancy and adolescent HPV vaccination. One-fifth of parents (n = 357) reported high HPV vaccine hesitancy and > 50% reported concerns about safety or side effects. High medical mistrust was associated with high parental HPV vaccine hesitancy (adjusted-OR 1.69, 95% CI: 1.13, 2.37). Community-tailored and multilevel strategies to increase vaccine confidence are needed to improve HPV and other adolescent vaccinations., Author(s): Jennifer Tsui [sup.1] , Bibiana Martinez [sup.1] , Michelle B. Shin [sup.1] , Alec Allee-Munoz [sup.2] , Ivonne Rodriguez [sup.3] , Jazmin Navarro [sup.3] , Kim R. Thomas-Barrios [sup.3] [...]
- Published
- 2023
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