Skip to main content
. 2020 May 13;16(11):2736–2743. doi: 10.1080/21645515.2020.1747923

Table 2.

Demographic characteristics and survey responses of providers surveyed (pre- and post-intervention)

Demographic information
Provider Race Non-Hispanic White 16 (80%)
  Hispanic/Latino 1 (5%)
  Asian 3 (15%)
Provider Sex Female 19 (90.5%)
  Male 2 (9.5%)
Professional Training Physician 15 (75%)
  Nurse Practitioner 5 (25%)
Clinical Specialty Family Medicine 8 (40%)
  Pediatrics 12 (60%)
Survey responses
 
Pre-Intervention n (%)
Post-Intervention n (%)
P-value (chi square or Fisher exact)
I believe that HPV vaccine is one of the most Important vaccines that I give to patients.
Agree/Strongly Agree
Disagree/Strongly Disagree


15 (71.4%)
6 (28.6%)


21 (100%)
0


0.02
I feel more comfortable offering HPV vaccine to adolescents age 13 and over compared to those younger than 13.
Agree/Strongly Agree
Disagree/Strongly Disagree


6 (28.6%)
15 (71.4%)


0
21 (100%)


0.02
Time pressure is a barrier to providing HPV vaccination.
Likely
Unlikely

6 (28.6%)
15 (71.4%)

4 (19.0%)
17 (80.9%)

0.72
Parents believe the HPV vaccine is:
Extremely/Very Important
Somewhat/Not important

1 (4.8%)
20 (95.2%)

9 (42.8%)
12 (57.1%)

0.01
Parental Reluctance to have children immunized against an STI is a barrier to HPV vaccination.
Likely
Unlikely


12 (57.1%)
9 (42.8%)


8 (38.1%)
13 (61.9%)


0.35

*1 missing value each for race, profession, and clinical specialty.