Disruptions to and Innovations in HPV Vaccination Strategies within Safety-Net Healthcare Settings Resulting from the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Procedures
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Ethical Considerations
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Outer Setting Domain
“We had specifically reached out to the clinician community—pediatricians, family practice physicians, internists—with pretty descriptive messaging about what the current state [low HPV vaccine rates during the pandemic], and recommendations for fixing it.”(LA, Policy Representative)
“So, the [HPV vaccine] webinar [for providers], “Give it Your Best Shot”, it became an actual webinar where we didn’t even have to go in and provide a presentation anymore…Because of COVID now, my presentations were turned into webinars or live webinars.”(NJ, Advocate)
“I feel like when people come in with information, a lot of it is through social media. Whether it’s correct information or misinformation…When people are saying, ‘Well, I don’t want, you know, the COVID vaccine because I saw this on Facebook’—or whatever. And then usually that’s—you know, so that’s a social media response.”(LA, Provider)
“Over the last 10–15 years, you know, it’s gone through phases. And now we’re at a low phase where people have trust in vaccines, and a lot of it has become political. And I think that the whole thing that’s going on with the COVID vaccine has really made vaccines a political issue…So, they’re falling into the same trap for all the vaccines, and you know it’s really been an issue.”(NJ, Clinic Leader)
“Honestly, I am really fearful that the politicization of immunization practices in general—well, the politicization of the COVID vaccine has and will continue to have some serious downstream effects on immunization uptake in childhood… I think that’s a tragedy.”(LA, Payer)
3.2. Inner Setting
“I think there’s a lot of support [to increase HPV vaccine uptake] amongst my pediatric colleagues. I think people are highly motivated to get this rate up… I hear that the new quality incentive pool, this pay for performance program, that’s going to be launching as we, hopefully, emerge from COVID, is going to have a lot of adolescent measures, which is awesome because adolescent health is just such an area of need.”(LA, Provider)
“Well, right now with COVID, we’re impacted significantly. Our patients are certainly of the population that are more at-risk [for COVID-19].”(LA, Payer)
“We actually stood up a vaccine tent on the outside and we outreached to people and said, ‘Hey, you’re due for these vaccines. We can set you up in a tent outside. You just have to come out for a brief second. You don’t have to walk through the hospital and get exposed to COVID.’”(LA, Provider)
“Because of the pandemic I have been doing outreach…I do the same thing, like I would normally do prior to the pandemic. Only difference is that I provide them with additional resources, webinars, links, webinars that they can go on and check out as well as that toolkit for them to review. But because of COVID, a lot of the focus have been on that and making sure that the kids, the adolescents, the patients are getting all of the doses that they needed or the checkups, well visits…”(NJ, Policy Representative)
3.3. Individuals Domain
“The patient population we take care of is, even in the pediatric population, is 25% uninsured, and with CHIP [California Health Insurance Program] and the insurance programs that are available now, that’s really a marker for not being a citizen…You know, 98% of who we take care of are under 200% of the federal poverty levels as well. So, it’s a poor population. Seventy percent are best served in a language other than English and that’s predominantly Spanish. So, at a population level, it’s certainly at risk for poor health outcomes. And I would say certainly, with all the immunizations, the pandemic over the last year and a half has really been very challenging to have people come in for wellness visits and get them taken care of.”(NJ, Payer)
3.4. Innovation Domain
“We show how you set up an appointment, how you separate people in your waiting room, how you talk to adolescents, their parents, children, about the importance of maintenance of these [COVID-19] immunizations.”(LA, Policy Representative)
“In March the van got parked because of COVID. We couldn’t go onsite to any of the schools. And we decided to bring everybody back to work in July, ‘cause things were calming down. We put into practice all the CDC standards to be safe on the van. And we had the schools calling us. Middle schools were calling us.”(LA, Clinic leader)
3.5. Implementation Process
“Given that we’re going through COVID, and everything that’s been going on with staff shortages, I think we need to straighten our care teams here, and most importantly doing the scrubbing to really going to have the time and the staff to assist with going into these charts and identifying these patients that are eligible to get this vaccine, or any vaccine. For the most part right now, it’s getting done, but I think there’s always room for improvement to make it stronger.”(LA, Clinic Staff)
“I would love to see kind of like the roundtable or NJ just take on kind of …HPV vaccination goal for the state. Like, ‘As a state, we are striving for….’ … So, it’s like you’re convening the troops…So, as an advocacy group like us, ‘This is what we’re committed to doing’. This is what the hospitals are committed to doing. This is what the pediatric centers or the federal-qualified health centers are committed to doing. So, everyone knows their role, and to [having] a real strategic plan, and having …a statewide goal around HPV, and really kind of building that momentum around making it a priority…”(NJ, Policy Representative)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Domains | Themes |
---|---|
I. Outer Setting Domain (e.g., external barriers to HPV vaccination caused by COVID-19 pandemic and mitigation strategies) | Theme 1: Policy and advocacy groups collaborating with the medical community throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to improve HPV vaccination rates. (Facilitator) Theme 2: The COVID-19 vaccine has been politicized and perpetuated misinformation on social media, which may also impact HPV vaccination rates. (Barrier) |
II. Inner Setting Domain (e.g., clinic barriers to HPV vaccination caused by COVID-19 pandemic and mitigation strategies) | Theme 3: Missed HPV vaccine doses due to the COVID-19 pandemic has sparked clinic motivation to improve uptake. (Barrier and Facilitator) Theme 4: Limited access to wellness visits resulted in increased clinic outreach efforts to improve HPV vaccine access during the pandemic. (Barrier and Facilitator) |
III. Individuals Domain (e.g., patient characteristics, behaviors, and perceptions towards HPV vaccination that emerged from the COVID-19 pandemic) | Theme 5: Medically underserved populations face greater challenges to receiving healthcare services, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Barrier) |
IV. Innovation Domain (e.g., innovative strategies for HPV vaccination that emerged from the COVID-19 pandemic to improve rates) | Theme 6: Clinic-based strategies for COVID-19 mitigation and vaccination improved patients’ experiences. (Facilitator) Theme 7: Clinic–community partnerships that emerged because of the COVID-19 pandemic can facilitate opportunities to increase access to HPV vaccines. (Facilitator) |
V. Implementation Process Domain (e.g., activities and strategies used for implementation of HPV vaccination as a result of COVID-19 pandemic) | Theme 8: Identification of clinic workflow opportunities as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Facilitator) Theme 9: Multilevel HPV partnerships are needed to facilitate new HPV vaccine strategies with common goals. (Facilitator) |
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© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Garcia, S.; Shin, M.; Sloan, K.; Dang, E.; Garcia, C.O.; Baezconde-Garbanati, L.; Palinkas, L.A.; Crabtree, B.F.; Tsui, J. Disruptions to and Innovations in HPV Vaccination Strategies within Safety-Net Healthcare Settings Resulting from the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare 2023, 11, 2380. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11172380
Garcia S, Shin M, Sloan K, Dang E, Garcia CO, Baezconde-Garbanati L, Palinkas LA, Crabtree BF, Tsui J. Disruptions to and Innovations in HPV Vaccination Strategies within Safety-Net Healthcare Settings Resulting from the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare. 2023; 11(17):2380. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11172380
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcia, Samantha, Michelle Shin, Kylie Sloan, Emily Dang, Carlos Orellana Garcia, Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, Lawrence A. Palinkas, Benjamin F. Crabtree, and Jennifer Tsui. 2023. "Disruptions to and Innovations in HPV Vaccination Strategies within Safety-Net Healthcare Settings Resulting from the COVID-19 Pandemic" Healthcare 11, no. 17: 2380. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11172380
APA StyleGarcia, S., Shin, M., Sloan, K., Dang, E., Garcia, C. O., Baezconde-Garbanati, L., Palinkas, L. A., Crabtree, B. F., & Tsui, J. (2023). Disruptions to and Innovations in HPV Vaccination Strategies within Safety-Net Healthcare Settings Resulting from the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare, 11(17), 2380. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11172380