School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening

BACKGROUND: Poor knowledge about cervical cancer plays a role in limiting screening uptake. HPV vaccination provides an untested platform to distribute information that could possibly improve knowledge and screening coverage. OBJECTIVE: To measure changes in knowledge and screening uptake when information and screening opportunities were provided to mothers of adolescent HPV vaccine recipients. METHODS: During an HPV vaccine implementation project in the Western Cape (WC) and Gauteng Province (GP), South Africa, information about cervical cancer was provided to parents during a lecture, written information was distributed, and mothers were then invited to either screen at their clinic (WC) or use a self-screening kit (GP). A structured questionnaire was used to test cervical cancer knowledge and screening practices, comparing these before and after the project and between the two screening groups. RESULTS: Complete data for both questionnaires were available for 777 of 906 recruited women. Initial knowledge was poor, but on retesting 6 months later, knowledge about symptoms (p<0.005), screening (p<0.005) and vaccination (p<0.05) improved significantly after the information session and school-based HPV vaccination. In the second questionnaire, women reported significantly more screening and the last reported screening test was more recent. This improvement was more favourable in GP than in the WC (41% v. 26% reporting screening in the past 12 months). CONCLUSION: These results demonstrate how adolescent HPV vaccine programmes can help to control cervical cancer among mothers by offering information and screening. It is important not to lose this opportunity to educate mothers and their daughters and offer effective methods to prevent cervical cancer in both generations.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dreyer,G, van der Merwe,F H, Botha,M H, Snyman,L C, Constant,D, Visser,C, Harvey,J
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: South African Medical Association 2015
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-95742015001100019
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S0256-95742015001100019
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S0256-957420150011000192015-11-19School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screeningDreyer,Gvan der Merwe,F HBotha,M HSnyman,L CConstant,DVisser,CHarvey,JBACKGROUND: Poor knowledge about cervical cancer plays a role in limiting screening uptake. HPV vaccination provides an untested platform to distribute information that could possibly improve knowledge and screening coverage. OBJECTIVE: To measure changes in knowledge and screening uptake when information and screening opportunities were provided to mothers of adolescent HPV vaccine recipients. METHODS: During an HPV vaccine implementation project in the Western Cape (WC) and Gauteng Province (GP), South Africa, information about cervical cancer was provided to parents during a lecture, written information was distributed, and mothers were then invited to either screen at their clinic (WC) or use a self-screening kit (GP). A structured questionnaire was used to test cervical cancer knowledge and screening practices, comparing these before and after the project and between the two screening groups. RESULTS: Complete data for both questionnaires were available for 777 of 906 recruited women. Initial knowledge was poor, but on retesting 6 months later, knowledge about symptoms (p<0.005), screening (p<0.005) and vaccination (p<0.05) improved significantly after the information session and school-based HPV vaccination. In the second questionnaire, women reported significantly more screening and the last reported screening test was more recent. This improvement was more favourable in GP than in the WC (41% v. 26% reporting screening in the past 12 months). CONCLUSION: These results demonstrate how adolescent HPV vaccine programmes can help to control cervical cancer among mothers by offering information and screening. It is important not to lose this opportunity to educate mothers and their daughters and offer effective methods to prevent cervical cancer in both generations.South African Medical AssociationSAMJ: South African Medical Journal v.105 n.11 20152015-11-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-95742015001100019en
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-za
tag revista
region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Dreyer,G
van der Merwe,F H
Botha,M H
Snyman,L C
Constant,D
Visser,C
Harvey,J
spellingShingle Dreyer,G
van der Merwe,F H
Botha,M H
Snyman,L C
Constant,D
Visser,C
Harvey,J
School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening
author_facet Dreyer,G
van der Merwe,F H
Botha,M H
Snyman,L C
Constant,D
Visser,C
Harvey,J
author_sort Dreyer,G
title School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening
title_short School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening
title_full School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening
title_fullStr School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening
title_full_unstemmed School-based human papillomavirus vaccination: An opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening
title_sort school-based human papillomavirus vaccination: an opportunity to increase knowledge about cervical cancer and improve uptake of screening
description BACKGROUND: Poor knowledge about cervical cancer plays a role in limiting screening uptake. HPV vaccination provides an untested platform to distribute information that could possibly improve knowledge and screening coverage. OBJECTIVE: To measure changes in knowledge and screening uptake when information and screening opportunities were provided to mothers of adolescent HPV vaccine recipients. METHODS: During an HPV vaccine implementation project in the Western Cape (WC) and Gauteng Province (GP), South Africa, information about cervical cancer was provided to parents during a lecture, written information was distributed, and mothers were then invited to either screen at their clinic (WC) or use a self-screening kit (GP). A structured questionnaire was used to test cervical cancer knowledge and screening practices, comparing these before and after the project and between the two screening groups. RESULTS: Complete data for both questionnaires were available for 777 of 906 recruited women. Initial knowledge was poor, but on retesting 6 months later, knowledge about symptoms (p<0.005), screening (p<0.005) and vaccination (p<0.05) improved significantly after the information session and school-based HPV vaccination. In the second questionnaire, women reported significantly more screening and the last reported screening test was more recent. This improvement was more favourable in GP than in the WC (41% v. 26% reporting screening in the past 12 months). CONCLUSION: These results demonstrate how adolescent HPV vaccine programmes can help to control cervical cancer among mothers by offering information and screening. It is important not to lose this opportunity to educate mothers and their daughters and offer effective methods to prevent cervical cancer in both generations.
publisher South African Medical Association
publishDate 2015
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-95742015001100019
work_keys_str_mv AT dreyerg schoolbasedhumanpapillomavirusvaccinationanopportunitytoincreaseknowledgeaboutcervicalcancerandimproveuptakeofscreening
AT vandermerwefh schoolbasedhumanpapillomavirusvaccinationanopportunitytoincreaseknowledgeaboutcervicalcancerandimproveuptakeofscreening
AT bothamh schoolbasedhumanpapillomavirusvaccinationanopportunitytoincreaseknowledgeaboutcervicalcancerandimproveuptakeofscreening
AT snymanlc schoolbasedhumanpapillomavirusvaccinationanopportunitytoincreaseknowledgeaboutcervicalcancerandimproveuptakeofscreening
AT constantd schoolbasedhumanpapillomavirusvaccinationanopportunitytoincreaseknowledgeaboutcervicalcancerandimproveuptakeofscreening
AT visserc schoolbasedhumanpapillomavirusvaccinationanopportunitytoincreaseknowledgeaboutcervicalcancerandimproveuptakeofscreening
AT harveyj schoolbasedhumanpapillomavirusvaccinationanopportunitytoincreaseknowledgeaboutcervicalcancerandimproveuptakeofscreening
_version_ 1756005765491982336