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Efficacy of an online intervention to promote uptake of the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccine in women

Jane Walsh,Sinead Leonard,Susanna Kola,John Birrane-2013-07-01-University of Huddersfield Repository (University of Huddersfield)
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TL;DRAbstract

Background: Educational interventions are fundamental to increasing knowledge of HPV. Educational interventions have focused on HPV as a sexually transmitted disease (STI) or as a causal factor in development of the illness. Gain-framed messages are more effective in promoting acceptance of the HPV vaccination (Gerend & Sheperd, 2007). Methods: A 3 (cervical cancer focused, cervical cancer/STI focused, and control) x 3 (baseline, immediate and one month follow-up) design was used to test the impact of an online intervention using positively framed messages on knowledge, PBC and intention to get HPV vaccine. Results: A significant interaction effect was found for knowledge about risks. Those in the cervical cancer condition displaying the greatest increases (F(4, 186)=2.54, p=.04). These differences did not, however, translate to intentions.
\nDiscussion: The study suggested that a focus on cervical cancer risk in educational interventions cervical for HPV may be more effective

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Background: Educational interventions are fundamental to increasing knowledge of HPV. Educational interventions have focused on HPV as a sexually transmitted disease (STI) or as a causal factor in development of the illness. Gain-framed messages are more effective in promoting acceptance of the HPV vaccination (Gerend & Sheperd, 2007). Methods: A 3 (cervical cancer focused, cervical cancer/STI focused, and control) x 3 (baseline, immediate and one month follow-up) design was used to test the impact of an online intervention using positively framed messages on knowledge, PBC and intention to get HPV vaccine. Results: A significant interaction effect was found for knowledge about risks. Those in the cervical cancer condition displaying the greatest increases (F(4, 186)=2.54, p=.04). These differences did not, however, translate to intentions.
\nDiscussion: The study suggested that a focus on cervical cancer risk in educational interventions cervical for HPV may be more effective

Keywords

Cervical cancerPsychological interventionMedicineIntervention (counseling)Human papilloma virusSexually transmitted diseaseVaccinationDisease

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