• Journal of women's health · Dec 2010

    Feasibility of using maternal cancer screening visits to identify adolescent girls eligible for human papillomavirus vaccination.

    • Ruth C Carlos, Amanda F Dempsey, Ken Resnicow, Mack T Ruffin, Divya A Patel, Christopher M Straus, Andrew Kure, and Vanessa K Dalton.
    • Department of Radiology, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0030, USA. rcarlos@umich.edu
    • J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2010 Dec 1; 19 (12): 227122752271-5.

    PurposeBreast or cervical cancer screening visits may present an opportunity to motivate mothers to have their daughters vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV). In preparation for a future intervention study, we sought to establish the feasibility of using these visits to identify women with at least one daughter in the appropriate age range for adolescent HPV vaccination.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional mailed survey of women who had received breast or cervical cancer screening within the 6-18 months before the survey. The study was conducted at two diverse institutions: one serving a mostly black (54.1%) urban inner-city population and another serving a mostly white (87.5%) suburban population.ResultsOur overall response rate was 28% (n = 556) in the urban site and 38% (n = 381) in the suburban site. In the urban site, the proportions of mothers completing mammography or Pap smear visits with HPV vaccine-eligible daughters were 23% and 24%, respectively. In the suburban site, the proportions of mothers completing mammography or Pap smear with at least one vaccine-eligible daughter were 41% and 26%, respectively.ConclusionsWomen who undergo breast or cervical cancer screening in the two different demographic groups evaluated have at least one adolescent daughter at the appropriate age for HPV vaccination. An important implication of this finding in adolescent daughters of urban mothers is the potential use of maternal breast or cervical cancer screening encounters to target a potentially undervaccinated group.

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