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. 2019 Oct 10;8(5):495–511. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2019.0004

Table 1.

Summary of Male Adolescent HPV Vaccination Uptake Included in Current Literature Review

Quality Author(s) Study design Study setting Participants Previous vaccination uptake Barriers reported
25 Calo et al.20
Parents' willingness to get HPV vaccination for their adolescent children at a pharmacy
Quantitative
National web-based survey
Recruited from a random national panel of US adults using random digit dialing, address based, or email with age-eligible male adolescents (11–17-year old) 672 parents of 11–17-year-old male adolescents
Parents were members of a standing, national panel of US adults maintained by survey research company
52% female
71% White, 13% Hispanic, 9% non-Hispanic Black
38% high school degree or less, 62% some college or more
64% no vaccine at beginning of study
24% no vaccine at conclusion
36% received one or two doses
Only 29% would get sons vaccinated at pharmacies
55% did not receive physician recommendation
34% thought the HPV vaccine as more important, 25% thought of it as less important
18% believes that sons as young as 11 could get HPV vaccine
70% were unaware that males as young as 11 could receive the vaccine
37% said they would like to find out about pharmacy vaccinations through physician
24 Farias et al.30
Association of physicians perceived barriers with HPV vaccination initiation
Quantitative (web-based survey and electronic medical records)
Pediatricians' perceived barriers to vaccinating adolescents 11–18 years of age
Recruited providers from the Texas Children's Pediatrics—a large network of clinics in Houston, TX
Compared to medical records (electronic) of HPV vaccination initiation over 12 months
134 providers (36.6% under 40, 29.6% 40–49, 17.2% 50–59, and 16.4% over 60)
Most were White (50%), Black (9%), or Hispanic (9.7%)
70.2% female, 29.9% male
18.6% reported initiating the vaccine regimen among 36,827 patients 18.7% reported barriers concerning level of knowledge about HPV
25.4% had concerns about parents' negative reaction about the HPV vaccine
73.1% reported discomfort talking about STIs with parents/patients
25.4% reported concern of financial burden on patients
15.7% concerned about vaccine safety
10.5% concerned about vaccine efficacy
70.9% not required for school attendance
64.2% concerned with the time it takes to discuss HPV vaccine
73.1% difficulty ensuring three-dose regimen among patients
82.8% infrequent office visits by patients
24 Greenfield et al.33
Strategies for increasing adolescent immunizations in diverse and ethnic communities
Mixed methods (in-person surveys and three focus groups)
Conducted with mothers of 11–18-year-old males who were Hispanic, Ethiopian, and/or Somali from King County, Washington
Three school systems of Burien, SeaTac, and Tukwila (the top three most diverse cities in Washington) 157 parents (mean age 41) and 45 adolescent males (mean age 15)
Parents were 35% Somali, 33% Hispanic, and 32% Ethiopian; 99% foreign born
Adolescents were 38% Somali, 27% Hispanic, and 36% Ethiopian; 60% foreign born
Reported by parent:
0% of Somali sons
40% of Hispanic sons
16% of Ethiopian sons
Reported by sons:
0% of Somali sons
30% of Hispanic sons
20% of Ethiopian sons
Surveys:
38% of parents heard of HPV in males
Parents reported their main reason for not vaccinating was not knowing that vaccines were recommended
22% of sons heard of HPV
25% of sons had heard of the HPV vaccine
Focus groups:
Parents did not trust recommendations from pharmacists or school nurses—lack of trust
Nearly universal to vaccinate if recommended to do so by physician
Existing misconceptions regarding the HPV vaccine, severity of HPV, complications, and how it is transmitted
Parents expressed a desire to access vaccine information in their native language
24 Griebeler et al.28
Parental beliefs and knowledge about male HPV vaccination in the US: A survey of a pediatric clinic population
Quantitative (in-person surveys) Convenience sample of a low-income, Medicaid pediatric clinic in the US 102 parents of male adolescents 9–20 years of age
Pediatric clinic demographics:
75% utilized Medicaid
85% White and 10% Black
No participant demographics were collected for anonymity purposes
66% of parents with sons younger than 12 have been vaccinated Majority of parents reported some knowledge of HPV (50%) or nothing (38%), followed by a lot (11%)
13% thought male HPV is not serious
8% thought that vaccines are against personal beliefs
38% were concerned of vaccine safety (new vaccine)
Child does not want to be vaccinated (4%)
Child is too young (38%)
Only 14% answered all knowledge questions correctly
30% were unable to identify any health outcomes of HPV in males
Of those that didn't vaccinate: 54% fulfilled child's wish to not be vaccinated; 38% reported child was too young/feared that vaccine would negatively affect child behavior
24 Reiter et al.17
Default policies and parents' consent for school-located HPV vaccination
Quantitative
(experimental, 3 × 2 between-subjects factorial design)
Recruited parents through an existing online, national survey of US HIS households
Only looked at parental response in this article
Parents: 404 parents of males 11–17 years of age
61% younger than 45 years, 67% were non-Hispanic White, 14% Black, 15% Hispanic, and 82% lived in an urban area
Sons: 404 sons—28% 11–12 years, 37% 13–15 years, and 35% 16–17 years
63% White, 12% Black, and 15% Hispanic
0% of sons Parents:
29.9% more likely to opt in if vaccinated at school
62% of the control group did not differ from opt in or out
70% did not know whether they will vaccinate their sons in the next year
More likely to vaccinate if vaccinated with other vaccines rather than by itself
23 Tan and Gerbie27
Perception, awareness, and acceptance of HPV disease and vaccine among parents of boys 9–18 years of age
Quantitative (in-person paper survey—given in both English and Spanish) Recruited parents of boys 9–18 years of age, who obtained primary care from pediatrician or public health clinics in Chicago, IL, from 2011 to 2013 516 parents (mean age of 41.5) of males 9–18 years of age
PCP Parents: 77.39% White, 9.57% Black, 4.4% Hispanic, and 4.7% Asian
97.3% private health insurance
Public health parents: 5.59% White, 25.52% Black, 62.24% Hispanic, and 4.55% Asian
92.31% Medicaid
0% of sons
44.35% of the PCP parental group would vaccinate, but 94.55% said that they would only if a physician recommended it
PCP parental group:
91.74% had heard of HPV and 86.96% heard of the vaccine
44.35% knew about the HPV vaccine for males
39.13% responded “Don't know” when asked what diseases HPV caused, but 36.52% knew that it caused genital warts
53.91% knew it was a common infection, and was sexually transmitted (76.52%)
Few knew that it caused cancer in males (16.96%)
Public health parental group:
65.93% have heard of HPV and 55.24% heard of the vaccine
26.92% knew about the HPV vaccine for males
68.53% did not know what HPV caused, but 16.43% knew it caused genital warts
33.33% knew it was a common infection, and 50.35% knew it was sexually transmitted
18.82% knew it caused cancer in males
23 Schuler and Coyne-Beasley43
Has their son been vaccinated? Beliefs about other parents matter for HPV vaccine
Quantitative (cross-sectional, in-person, self-administered survey) Pediatric clinic that provides pediatric and subspecialty care in North Carolina 267 parents of sons 9–21 years of age
48% younger than 40
21% male, 79% female
51% White, 40% Black, and 9% other
94% non-Hispanic
55% married
19% had sons 9–10 years, 18% 11–12 years, and 63% 13–21 years
0% of sons
63% of parents were probably going to vaccinate within the next year
8% would definitely not vaccinate
15–18% of parents had correct answers regarding anal, penile, and oropharyngeal cancers caused by HPV
29% of parents would not vaccinate their sons in the next year
Parents who had others in their community vaccinating their sons the same age were 4 × more likely to vaccinate sons in the next year
59% of parents were worried HPV vaccines cause unknown, long-term side effects
23 Schuler, DeSousa, and Coyne-Beasley40
Parents' decisions about HPV vaccine for sons: The importance of protecting sons' future female partners
Quantitative (cross-sectional, in-person, self-administered survey) about sons Pediatric clinic that provides pediatric and subspecialty care serving those 21 years and younger in North Carolina 246 parents of sons 9–21 years of age
51% younger than 40
21% male, 79% female
52% White, 40% Black, and 8% other
57% married
21% 9–10 years, 20% 11–12 years, and 59% 13–21 years
0% of sons 76% would vaccinate sons to protect future female partners, and those who were not concerned about this were less likely to vaccinate
15% said they would vaccinate in the next year, 30% said that they would probably not vaccinate, and 8% said they would definitely not vaccinate
Parents 40 years of age and older (83%) indicated that female partner protection would likely influence vaccine decisions compared to younger parents (70%)
23 Cates et al.21
Designing messages to motivate parents to get their preteenage sons vaccinated against HPV
Mixed methods
Five focus groups and interviews from 2009 to 2010
Focus groups: Recruited from churches and a middle school in rural Sampson county, North Carolina, through flyers and announcements
Interviews: Completed at pediatric and adolescent health clinic affiliated with UNC Chapel Hill, recruited parents from university-based health clinics
Focus groups: 29 parents of 11–12-year-old boys; 76% female, 67% older than 40, 100% Black
Interviews: 100 parents of 9–13-year-old boys; 77% female, 46% Black, 44% White, and 10% other; 69% mothers, 19% fathers, and 12% other relatives
Interview: 6% of sons had received first dose
16% said they would “definitely” or “probably” get sons vaccinated within 12 months
Focus groups:
Low awareness of HPV (unaware of serious consequences for males or that males could get HPV)
Low awareness of the HPV vaccine
Perceived susceptibility/severity of HPV in males (thought son at risk if they were sexually active)
Three-dose series cost too much
Vaccine side effects
Long-term safety and effectiveness
Feeling like “guinea pigs,” compared the HPV vaccine to the syphilis study in the past
Interviews:
11% heard about the HPV vaccine for males
48% reported concerns for vaccine safety and side effects
25% were unaware of the male prevalence of HPV
19% were distracted by number of doses needed
23 Oldach and Katz42
Ohio Appalachia public health department personnel: HPV vaccine availability, and acceptance and concerns among parents of male and female adolescents
Qualitative (semistructured telephone/questionnaire interviews) Health departments in Appalachian Ohio identified through the Ohio Department of Health (ODH) website
Member of research teams called each health department to schedule telephone interview
46 public health departments and lead providers in those departments (32 county level, 14 city level)
24 public health nurses, 21 directors of public health nursing, and 1 public health supervisor
Race/ethnicity was not reported
N/A Provider barriers:
55.6% lack of knowledge about HPV in males
37.8% concern about vaccine side effects
35.6% new vaccine concerns
35.6% patients are not sexually active or too young
22.2% negative publicity form media or community
15.6% vaccine causes sexual promiscuity
15.6% vaccine not mandatory
13.3% difficulty discussing HPV vaccine
8.9% vaccine series completion rate
6.7% patient does n0t like vaccines (e.g., pain)
4.4% no vaccination because of religious beliefs
Provider-reported parental barriers:
44.4% unaware of vaccine for males
13.3% knew more information about the HPV vaccine and females
35.6% had lack of knowledge
of why males should receive the HPV vaccine
11.1% of parents perceived HPV as less severe as other STIs
22 Thompson et al.35
HPV vaccination: What are the reasons for nonvaccination among US adolescents?
Mixed methods (parent telephone interview, and then provider survey to verify vaccination status) Recruited from NIS-teen survey from 2010 to 2012 and contacted a second time for interview 59,897 parents of male adolescents from 2010 to 2014
58.8% of parents had adolescent sons
68% were female, 25.6% male, 3.0% grandparents
Race/ethnicity was not reported
0% overall vaccination uptake
51.9% reported not getting their son vaccinated
31.6% were unlikely to receive the vaccine
Most parents who did not vaccinate sons (or said that they would not) did so because they believed that the HPV vaccine is not needed for males
Among those who chose not to be vaccinated, lack of knowledge was a major factor
Sons are not sexually active
Vaccine was not recommended
Safety and side effects caused by the HPV vaccine were a concern
22 Luque et al.32
Recommendations and administration of the HPV vaccine to 11- to 12-year-old girls and boys: A statewide survey of Georgia vaccines for children provider practices
Quantitative cross-sectional
(web-based, paper, and telephone self-administered survey)
Recruited providers from 206 locations in GA through the GA vaccines for children provider list from 2010 to 2011
Probability 1-stage cluster sampling with counties as clusters
217 providers (mean age of 51 years)
59% were White, 20% Black, 14% Asian
And 94% non-Hispanic
57% male
Mean number of years since residency training was 18 years
N/A 12% vaccine safety and efficacy
17% new vaccine with limited track record
15% adding another vaccine to schedule
12% lack of information about the vaccine
69% upfront cost of purchasing vaccine was high
73% cost of stocking vaccine
68% lack of reimbursement for vaccine from insurance
63% failure of insurance coverage in males
15% lack of time to discuss vaccine with patients
51% difficulty ensuring the three-dose regimen
23% vaccine not required for school
20% of providers would always recommend male patients get vaccinated
21 Reiter et al.23
Early adoption of the HPV vaccine among Hispanic adolescent males in the US
Quantitative (secondary analysis of national, telephone survey) Recruited parents through an existing online, NIS-teen from 2010 to 2012 Parents: 4238 parents of adolescent sons (13–17 years old)
Majority of mothers were at least 35 years (86%) and did not have college degrees (81.6%)
Sons: 100% of sons were Hispanic; 86.1% of sons were Hispanic-White, 5.6% Black, and 8.3% other mixed
Most sons were 13–15 years of age (62.4%)
Initiation: 17.1% received at least one dose
Initiation increased each year to 2.8% in 2010, 14.9% in 2011, and 31.7% in 2012
Overall: 5.5% of adolescent Hispanic males completed all three doses
Parents:
23.6% reported lack of knowledge about HPV
40.2% was not sure about vaccination over the next year or not likely at all
22.5% believed vaccine is not needed
22% did not have provider recommendation
Spanish-speaking parents were more likely to indicate lack of knowledge (19.9% vs. 32.9%) and not receiving a provider recommendation (17.7% vs. 32.2%) than English-speaking patients
English-speaking parents were more likely to indicate believing vaccinations as not needed (27.2% vs. 10.6%), that their son was not sexually active (11.2% vs. 3.5%), that their child is male, therefore did not need the vaccine (7.5% vs. 2.2%), and being concerned about vaccine safety and side effects (6.8% vs. 3.1%)
21 Reiter et al.17,36
Improving HPV vaccine delivery: A national study of parents and their adolescent sons
Quantitative
(cross-sectional, web-based, self-administered survey)
Dual-approach (list-assisted random-digit dialing and address-based sampling)
Recruited parents through an existing online, national survey of US households Parents: 506 parents—54% female, most 45 years of age or younger (61%)
Majority non-Hispanic White (67%), Black (12%), and Hispanic (15%); with some college or more (56%)
Sons: 391 sons—30% 11–12 years, 38% 13–15 years, or 31% 16–17 years
Majority non-Hispanic White (61%), Black (12%), or Hispanic (16%)
79% saw physician within past year
0% Parents
Preferred for child be vaccinated at doctor's office
Preferred brief nurse visits for vaccination (65%) rather than pharmacy vaccination
29% believed insurance would not cover vaccination at school
Sons
Preferred to be vaccinated at doctor's office for initial vaccine; and a brief nurse visits for vaccination for two last shots
32% were embarrassed to be vaccinated
21 Reiter et al.16
HPV vaccine and adolescent males
Quantitative (web-based, self-administered survey) Recruited parents of adolescent sons 11–17 years of age (and later sons) from an existing national panel of US households Parents: 547 participants (61% younger than 45)
67% White, 13% Black, 15% Hispanic, and 5% other; majority were married (82%)
Sons: 421 participants (30% 11–12 years, 38% 13–15 years, and 32% 16–17 years)
61% White, 12% Black, and 16% Hispanic
2% of sons received any HPV vaccine dosage
<1% received all three doses
Parents:
0.48% talked to sons about vaccine
21% sons' insurance covers vaccine
0.75% worry about sons getting HPV
0.93% perceive effectiveness of vaccine
0.67% perceived uncertainty about vaccine
0.53% perceived harms of HPV vaccine
80% were unaware that the HPV vaccine can be given to males
43% would give vaccine to son if it was free
Sons:
75% had never heard of HPV
0.67% perceived themselves getting HPV
0.41% amount talking with parents about vaccine
0.60% reported peer acceptance of vaccine
1.06% anticipated embarrassment of getting HPV vaccine
Sons willingness to get vaccinated was positively correlated to parent's willingness to get them a free HPV vaccine
Reported high anticipated regret if they did not vaccinate and later got HPV or genital warts
20 Alexander et al.24
What parents and their adolescent sons suggest for male HPV vaccine messaging
Qualitative (30–60 minutes in-person, semistructured interviews)
Parent–son dyads interviewed about how they felt about vaccination uptake and series completion, demographic questionnaire
Recruited from primary care clinics in Indianapolis, IN, from low- to middle-income families
23 dyads were approached for participation, only 21 participated
Parents and sons were interviewed simultaneously, but in separate rooms and interviewers
21 adolescent males (13–17 years of age) parent–son dyads (42 separate interviews)
Sons: Black (n = 14), Hispanic (n = 5), and White (n = 2) ranging from 13 to 17 years of age
Parents: Majority were female (n = 17), ranging in age 31–53, majority were single (n = 12), half had at least a high school education (n = 11)
0% Sons:
Felt it was important for a provider recommendation
Side effect of vaccines
Sons also noted misinformation (e.g., should get vaccine before sexual initiation, available to males, prevention of STIs, genital warts, and cancer)
Parents:
Side effects of vaccines and fear for sons' health
Doses were spaced too far apart
Do not want children to feel like “guinea pigs”
Did not receive provider recommendation
Cost of HPV vaccine too high
Length of three-dose regimen
Time since the approval of HPV vaccine
20 Reiter et al.22
Longitudinal predictors of HPV vaccination among a national sample of adolescent males
Quantitative
Longitudinal (two time points)
Web-based, self-administered surveys
Part of the HIS study
Recruited parents through an existing online, national survey of US households (dual-frame sampling approach)
Panel maintained by a survey company
Baseline: 547 parents, 421 sons (11–17 years)
Follow-up: 327 parents, 228 sons
Parents: 59% younger than 45 years
68% White, 80% married, 60% college education, 84% lived in urban areas, 32% born-again Christian, 52% female
Sons: 65% White, 30% 11–12 years, 37% 13–15 years, and 33% 16–17 years
Baseline: 2% of parents had sons who had initiated the HPV vaccine regimen
Follow-up: 6% had sons who received at least one dose of the HPV vaccine
8% had initiated the regimen
4% had received all doses
Baseline vs. follow-up:
11% did not know enough about the HPV vaccine vs. 23% at follow-up
10% did not receive a doctor recommendation vs. 17% at follow-up
6% thought vaccine is unsafe vs. 10% at follow-up
4% were worried because vaccine is new vs. 8% at follow-up
3% did not have recent doctor appointment vs. 11% at follow-up
23% did not know boys can get HPV vs. 5% at follow-up
6% believed their sons were too young vs. 2% at follow-up
55% who received a recommendation vaccinated son vs. 1% at follow-up
19 Finney Rutten et al.31
Clinician knowledge, clinician barriers, and perceived parental barriers regarding HPV vaccination: Association with initiation and completion rates
Quantitative (web-based survey and secondary data extraction)
Data reported on 9–18-year-old patients residing in the same 27-county geographic region from 2015 to 2016
Recruited from Rochester Epidemiology Project across 27 counties in Olmsted county, MN 280 providers and nurses from 52 clinic sites (70% providers, 26.8% nurses)
86.1% non-Hispanic White, 13.9% other
11.407 (11.7%) patients had initiated series
5.267 (43.0%) completed vaccination series within study timeframe
Clinician-reported barriers:
38.9% incorrectly agreed that genital warts were caused by the same HPV types as cervical cancer
43.2% concerned about vaccine safety
41.8% had difficulty discussing sexuality and STIs
43.6% difficulty adding new vaccine to vaccine schedule
Vaccine not required for school admittance (50.4%)
Perceived parental barriers:
54% limited HPV knowledge
49.8% parental request of vaccine deferment
48.6% thought child was not at risk for HPV
36.1% parental reluctance to discuss sexuality and STIs
34.7% thought child was too young
19 Bhatta and Phillips34
HPV vaccine awareness, uptake, and parental and health care provider communication among 11- to 18-year-old adolescents in rural Appalachian Ohio county in the US
Quantitative longitudinal
Secondary data analysis of the self-administered survey, 2012 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System from additional five questions
Middle school and high school classrooms within a rural county located in Northeast Ohio Appalachia 674 sons (11–18 years of age) out of 1299 participants (separate male/female statistical analyses)
90.3% were non-Hispanic White
3% were 11 years of age
0% beginning
62.3% were never vaccinated
3.8% received one dose
1.9% received two doses
0.9% received all three doses
Sons (24.0%) had less HPV awareness than female counterparts (36.6%)
Younger age
Lack of communication with parents
42.1% sons knew what the HPV vaccine was
13% parents talked about the HPV vaccine
14.4% physicians talked about the HPV vaccine
11.5% sons reported ever receiving the HPV vaccine
19 Khurana et al.15
HPV vaccine acceptance among adolescent males and their parents in two suburban pediatric practices
Cross-sectional quantitative
Self-administered surveys completed with parent (<18 years, or by self if 18 years or older)
Pediatric clinics in suburbs in Maryland between 2011 and 2012
Parents were recruited by pediatricians during medical visits at two private solo visits in pediatric practices in Maryland
Sons: 154 sons 11–21 years of age (mean age 14.9 years); 71.7% White, 15.1% Asian, 13.2% other
Parents: 121 parents (mean age 45.8 years); 72.3% White, 17.6% Asian, and 10.1% other
Most were college educated and middle class
0% Sons:
15.5% accepted vaccine, 27% did not, 57.4% did not know
38.3% heard of HPV
33.1% heard of the HPV vaccine, 8.5% had family/friends received vaccine
60.5% would accept if it protects against warts
Adolescents who were sexually active were 4 × more likely to accept vaccine
61.4% would accept if it protects partners from cervical cancer
Parents:
31.9% accepted vaccine, 18.5% did not, 49.6% did not know
90% heard of HPV
81.5% heard of the HPV vaccine
32.8% had family/friends receive vaccine
70.6% would accept if it protects against warts
63.6% would accept if it protects partners from cervical cancer
19 Alexander et al.29
Parent–son decision-making about HPV vaccination: A qualitative analysis
Qualitative (30–60 minutes in-person, semistructured interviews)
Parent–son dyads asked about decision to vaccinate and physician vaccination recommendation
Recruited from primary care clinics in Indianapolis, IN, from low- to middle-income families
Parents and sons were interviewed simultaneously, but in separate rooms and interviewers
21 adolescent males (13–17 years of age) parent–son dyads (42 separate interviews)
Sons: Black (n = 14), Hispanic (n = 5), and White (n = 2) ranging from 13 to 17 years
Parents: Majority were female (n = 17), ranging in age 31–53, majority were single (n = 12), half had at least a high school education (n = 11)
0% Parents:
Vaccine was optional
Questions about sex from son
Limited ability to monitor sons' activities
Potential risks with the vaccine (n = 2)
Physician talked about genital warts
Vaccine safety
Prevention against cancer and genital warts
Availability for males
A subset talking about cervical cancer in girls
Sons:
Pain is most common concern (e.g., get shot in penis)
Many felt as though this was the first health care decision that they had been involved in
18 Agawu et al.37
Sociodemographic differences in HPV vaccine initiation by adolescent males
Quantitative
(retrospective cohort study; medical record extraction)
Network of primary care practices affiliated with a large metropolitan children's hospital located in Pennsylvania and New Jersey
Recruited from preventative or acute appointments
58,757 sons 11–18 years of age
57.3% non-Hispanic White, 27.6% non-Hispanic Black
76.9% private insurance
0% beginning
Blacks vaccinated most (53.7%), then Hispanics (44.1%), then Whites (33.1%)
20,465 (77.6%) vaccinated within 2 years of first visit
39% initiated overall
6.9% vaccinated at first visit
No/poor insurance (being on Medicaid or no insurance)
Racial subgroups with Medicaid were more likely to initiate vaccine series than those with private insurance
Non-Hispanic White participants were less likely to initiate HPV vaccine series
Black participants most likely to vaccinate then Hispanics
17 Liddon et al.39
Provider attitudes toward HPV vaccine for males
Quantitative, systematic review (secondary data analysis discussing research design and outcomes reported) HPV vaccine acceptance in males quantitative or qualitative data 23 published articles (half published in the US)
87% quantitative, 13% qualitative
Most used convenience samples (74%) and 26% relied on nationally representative samples
NA Providers are likely to recommend the HPV vaccine to male adolescents, but are more likely to recommend it to those 13–18 years of age
Most offer the vaccine to males to protect future female partners
59% believe the vaccine would provide an opportunity to discuss sexual health with adolescent patients
Younger children are less likely to have preventative health care visits or see physicians for vaccination series
81% adolescent males had either not heard of HPV or had low HPV knowledge

HIS, HPV Immunization in Sons; HPV, human papillomavirus; N/A, not applicable; NIS, national teen immunization survey; PCP, primary care physician; STI, sexually transmitted infection; US, United States.