Poor quality of primary care providers' vaccine recommendations lead to low adolescent human papillomavirus vaccination rates and hundreds of thousands of adolescents unnecessarily at risk for HPV-associated cancers and diseases. Though a previous provider communication intervention, called PCOM, was found to be effective for increasing adolescent HPV vaccination in primary care, its dissemination is limited by the need for significant research team involvement to teach providers how to use the intervention's components. To address this, investigators propose to develop and test a virtual version of PCOM, use mixed methods to assess contextual factors affecting its use compared to the original PCOM intervention, and develop an optimized version of PCOM for broad dissemination to increase adolescent HPV vaccination nationally.
The overarching goal is to develop a "Virtual" version of the PCOM intervention ("PCOM-Virtual") and compare its efficacy for increasing HPV vaccination among adolescents to that of the original PCOM intervention ("PCOM-Standard"). Using Dissemination \& Implementation (D\&I) science principles to develop and evaluate the PCOM-Virtual intervention for non-inferiority, investigators anticipate that to have a "shelf ready" intervention and associated "User Manual" that can be easily incorporated into practices broadly to improve the practice's adolescent HPV vaccination rates. Specific Aims are to: (1) develop the "PCOM-Virtual" intervention using principles of D\&I Science; (2) compare the efficacy of "PCOM-Virtual" versus "PCOM-Standard" in improving adolescent HPV vaccine utilization; and (3) examine whether practice, patient and provider characteristics are associated with variability in the efficacy of PCOM-Virtual and PCOM-Standard.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
120
The PCOM-standard intervention is based off of a provider communication training that utilizes presumptive technique when initiating the vaccine discussion followed by motivational interviewing if a parent continues to show hesitation. While this provider communication technique previously showed success in increasing HPV vaccination uptake, it is neither easy to disseminate nor sustainable due to it's nature of direct, intensive in-person training. Therefore, the intervention is to compare the standard-PCOM intervention to a new, PCOM2 intervention, that will be adapted virtually.
The PCOM-standard intervention is based off of a provider communication training that utilizes presumptive technique when initiating the vaccine discussion followed by motivational interviewing if a parent continues to show hesitation. PCOM-standard will be conducted in-person with providers.
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Aurora, Colorado, United States
RECRUITINGUniversity of Kansas Medical Center
Wichita, Kansas, United States
RECRUITINGHPV vaccination initiation status in 11-12 year olds
The primary outcome to be assessed in the trial is HPV vaccine series initiation among 11-12-year-olds as 11-12 year-olds are the preferred target population for HPV vaccination and the PCOM intervention had its strongest effect on series initiation rather than completion.
Time frame: Adolescent vaccination initiation status will be assessed among all "active" (seen in the last 12 months) 11 to 12-year-old patients at each practice during the last 12 months of the 24 month intervention period
HPV series completion among 11-12 year olds
Secondary outcome to assess HPV series completion among 11-12-year-olds
Time frame: Adolescent vaccination completion status will be assessed among all "active" (seen in the last 12 months) 11 to 12-year-old patients at each practice during the last 12 months of the 24 month intervention period
HPV vaccination initiation status in 13-17 year olds
Secondary outcome to assess "catch-up" HPV vaccine series initiation among 13-17-year-olds
Time frame: Adolescent vaccination initiation status will be assessed among all "active" (seen in the last 12 months) 13-17-year-old patients at each practice during the last 12 months of the 24 month intervention period
HPV series completion among 13-17 year olds
Secondary outcome to assess "catch-up" HPV vaccine series completion among 13-17 year-olds.
Time frame: Adolescent vaccination completion status will be assessed among all "active" (seen in the last 12 months) 13-17-year-old patients at each practice during the last 12 months of the 24 month intervention period
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