Communication Interactions, Needs, and Preferences During Clinical Encounters of African American Parent –Child Dyads

AbstractHuman papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination rates remain suboptimal among African American adolescents. Although provider recommendations during clinical encounters are believed to be highly effective in increasing uptake and series completion, little has been reported about parent –child perspectives on the counseling received during these encounters. Among African American parent–child dyads, we sought to explore and compare interactions, needs, and preferences during clinical encounters by child’s HPV vaccination status. We applied a qualitative, phenomenological stud y design to conduct semi-structured interviews with African American parent–child dyads representing children who were unvaccinated (n = 10), had initiated but not completed (n = 9), or had completed the HPV vaccine series (n = 11). Using iterative, inductive-deductive thematic analysis, five themes were generated: (1) parents’ attitudes varied about the HPV vaccine but were mostly positive for vaccines in general; (2) patient-parent-provider clinical encounters from the parent perspective; (3) patient-parent-prov ider clinical encounters from the child perspective; (4) methods of distribution of supplemental HPV information; and (5) communication desired on HPV vaccination by parents and children. Parents stating they received a provider’s recommendation increased by vaccination status (unvaccinated: 6 out of 10; initiated: 8 out of 11; completed: 9 out of 9). Most parents and chil...
Source: Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Source Type: research