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Differences in school factors associated with adolescent HPV vaccination initiation and completion coverage in three Australian states

Authors :
Lena Sanci
Alison Venn
V. Sheppeard
J Kaldor
Lisa J. Whop
Rebecca Lorch
Cristyn Davies
Paul V. Effler
Sharyn Burns
Cassandra Vujovich-Dunn
Sonya Ennis
Julia M.L. Brotherton
Heather F. Gidding
Linda A. Selvey
Karen Canfell
Handan Wand
Melissa Kang
Meredith Temple-Smith
Rebecca Guy
N. Lane
JS Hocking
Michael Kidd
Julie Leask
S.R. Skinner
Megan Smith
J. Sisnowski
Dennis Meijer
Mark Veitch
Chloe A Thomson
Source :
Vaccine. 39:6117-6126
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundSchools are the primary setting for the delivery of adolescent HPV vaccination in Australia. Although this strategy has achieved generally high vaccination coverage, gaps persist for reasons that are mostly unknown. This study sought to identify school-level correlates of low vaccination course initiation and completion in New South Wales, Tasmania, and Western Australia to inform initiatives to increase uptake.MethodsInitiation was defined as the number of first doses given in a school in 2016 divided by vaccine-eligible student enrolments. Completion was the number of third doses given in a school in 2015-2016 divided by the number of first doses. Low initiation and completion were defined as coverage ≤ 25thpercentile of all reporting schools. We investigated correlations between covariates using Spearman's rank correlation coefficients. Due to multicollinearity, we used univariable logistic regression to investigate associations between school characteristics and low coverage.ResultsMedian initiation was 84.7% (IQR: 75.0%-90.4%) across 1,286 schools and median completion was 93.8% (IQR: 86.0%-97.3%) across 1,295 schools. There were strong correlations between a number of school characteristics, particularly higher Indigenous student enrolments and lower attendance, increasing remoteness, higher postcode socioeconomic disadvantage, and smaller school size. Characteristics most strongly associated with low initiation in univariate analyses were small school size, location in Tasmania, and schools catering for special educational needs. Low completion was most strongly associated with schools in Tasmania and Western Australia, remote location, small size, high proportion of Indigenous student enrolments, and low attendance rates.ConclusionThis study provides indicative evidence that characteristics of schools and school populations are associated with the likelihood of low initiation and completion of the HPV vaccination course. The findings will guide further research and help target initiatives to improve vaccination uptake in schools with profiles associated with lower coverage.

Details

ISSN :
0264410X
Volume :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vaccine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....90df5080019555b80c0044996d99443c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.08.076