Table 2.
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.