Provider recommendation for HPV vaccination across Hispanic/Latinx subgroups in the United States

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Abstract

Healthcare provider recommendation is a key predictor of HPV vaccination among adolescents, yet little is known about how parents’ receipt of a provider recommendation differs across Hispanic/Latinx subgroups in the United States. We analyzed data from the 2012–2016 National Immunization Survey–Teen on Hispanic/Latinx adolescent ages 13–17 (n = 16,335). Analyses used weighted logistic regression models. Overall, 62.6% of parents of Hispanic/Latinx females and 46.4% of parents of Hispanic/Latinx males reported that they had received a provider recommendation for HPV vaccination. Among parents of females, receipt of a provider recommendation ranged from 55.0% among Central Americans to 73.3% among parents of Puerto Ricans. Among parents of males, the range was from 44.5% among Mexicans and multi-subgroup males to 53.4% among Cubans. There were no differences across Hispanic/Latinx subgroups in adjusted models among either males or females (all p > .05). Among parents of females, provider recommendation was less common among those whose preferred language was Spanish for Central Americans and South Americans (both p

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Reiter, P. L., Pennell, M. L., Martinez, G. A., & Katz, M. L. (2021). Provider recommendation for HPV vaccination across Hispanic/Latinx subgroups in the United States. Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics, 17(4), 1083–1088. https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2020.1846399

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