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Catching Up
Early Childhood
Factor Analysis
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Explaining variation in the uptake of HPV vaccination in England
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Explaining variation in the uptake of HPV vaccination in England
(
Citations: 1
)
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Varun M Kumar
,
David K Whynes
Background In England, two national programmes of HPV vaccination for girls have been instituted, a routine programme for 12- and 13-year-olds and a catch-up programme for 17- and 18-year-olds. Uptake rates across the country have been far from uniform, and this research sought to identify factors explaining the variation in uptake by locality. Methods An association between uptake, deprivation and ethnic background had been established in pilot research. The present analysis was conducted at an aggregate,
Primary Care Trust
(PCT), level for the
first year
of the programmes. Published measures of HPV vaccination uptake, material deprivation, ethnic composition of PCT populations,
primary care
quality, and uptake of cervical screening and of other childhood immunisations were collated. Strong evidence of collinearity amongst the explanatory variables required a
factor analysis
to be undertaken. This provided four independent factors, used thereafter in regression models to explain uptake by PCT. Results The
factor analysis
revealed that ethnic composition was associated with attitudes towards cervical screening and other childhood vaccinations, whilst material deprivation and quality of
primary care
were orthogonal. Ethnic composition,
early childhood
vaccination, cervical screening and
primary care
quality were found to be influential in predicting uptake in both the routine and the catch-up cohorts, although with a lower degree of confidence in the case of the last two independent variables. Lower
primary care
quality was significant in explaining a greater fall in vaccination uptake between the first two doses in the catch-up cohort. Greater deprivation was a significant explanatory factor for both uptake and the fall in uptake between doses for the catch-up cohort but not for uptake in the routine cohort. Conclusion These results for uptake of the
first year
of the national programme using aggregate data corroborate findings from intentions surveys and pilot studies. Deprivation, the ethnic composition of the population, the effectiveness of
primary care
and the acceptability of childhood vaccinations are salient factors in explaining local HPV vaccine uptake in England.
Journal:
BMC Public Health
, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 1-7, 2011
DOI:
10.1186/1471-2458-11-172
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References
(25)
The United Kingdom Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation
(
Citations: 3
)
Andrew J. Hall
Journal:
Vaccine
, vol. 28, pp. A54-A57, 2010
Economic evaluation of human papillomavirus vaccination in the United Kingdom
(
Citations: 58
)
Mark Jit
,
Yoon Hong Choi
,
W John Edmunds
Journal:
British Medical Journal - BMJ
, vol. 337, no. jul17 2, pp. a769-a769, 2008
Sociodemographic predictors of HPV testing and vaccination acceptability: results from a population-representative sample of British women
(
Citations: 9
)
L. A V Marlow
,
J. Waller
,
J. Wardle
Journal:
Journal of Medical Screening - J MED SCREEN
, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 91-96, 2008
Ethnic differences in human papillomavirus awareness and vaccine acceptability
(
Citations: 8
)
L A V Marlow
,
J Wardle
,
A S Forster
,
J Waller
Journal:
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health - J EPIDEMIOL COMMUNITY HEALTH
, vol. 63, no. 12, pp. 1010-1015, 2009
Uptake of first two doses of human papillomavirus vaccine by adolescent schoolgirls in Manchester: prospective cohort study
(
Citations: 43
)
L. Brabin
,
S. A Roberts
,
R. Stretch
,
D. Baxter
,
G. Chambers
,
H. Kitchener
,
R. McCann
Journal:
British Medical Journal - BMJ
, vol. 336, no. 7652, pp. 1056-1058, 2008
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Incident response and compliance: A case study of the recent attacks
Jeff Tutton
Journal:
Information Security Technical Report
, vol. 15, no. 4, pp. 145-149, 2010