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. 2020 Dec:266:113441.
doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113441. Epub 2020 Oct 13.

Physicians' rhetorical strategies for motivating HPV vaccination

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Physicians' rhetorical strategies for motivating HPV vaccination

Melissa B Gilkey et al. Soc Sci Med. 2020 Dec.

Abstract

Rationale: Receiving a healthcare provider's recommendation is a well-documented predictor of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination, and yet recommendations remain understudied and undertheorized.

Objective: To qualitatively describe strategies providers use to motivate HPV vaccination.

Method: We surveyed a national sample of 771 U.S. primary care physicians. Data came from an open-ended item that assessed physicians' perspectives on the most effective thing they could say to persuade parents to get HPV vaccine for their 11- to 12-year-old children. Using a standardized codebook and two independent coders, we conducted a thematic analysis to identify rhetorical strategies underlying physicians' responses.

Results: We identified two sets of strategies for motivating HPV vaccination. One set drew parents' attention to specific actors or vaccine characteristics. Physicians using these strategies asked parents to consider their children's individual risk in the short-term, named specific diseases that could be prevented, emphasized the novelty of HPV vaccine as a cancer prevention tool, and gave their personal endorsement for HPV vaccination. In contrast, the second set of strategies was more distancing and impersonal. Physicians using these strategies referenced future risk, described cancer prevention in general terms, framed HPV vaccine as similar to other vaccines, and shared organizational endorsements for HPV vaccination. Across these two sets of strategies, a tension emerged between the goals of engaging parents' perceptions of HPV as a threat to their children versus framing HPV vaccination as a normative standard of care.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that theoretical frameworks, such as Construal Level Theory, may be helpful for positioning provider recommendations in the broader literature on persuasive communication. By identifying competing approaches to motivating HPV vaccination, this study lays the groundwork for future research to test the acceptability and impact of strategies for recommending routine preventive care.

Keywords: Adolescent health; Health communication; Human papillomavirus infections/prevention & control; Preventive medicine; Primary health care; Vaccination.

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Conflict of interest statement

NB has received HPV vaccine-related grants from or been on paid advisory boards for GlaxoSmithKline, Merck and Pfizer; he served on the National Vaccine Advisory Committee Working Group on HPV Vaccine and is chair of the National HPV Vaccination Roundtable. The remaining authors (MG, BG, TM, MH) have no conflicts of interest to report.

References

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