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Vaccine | 2016

Provider communication and HPV vaccination: The impact of recommendation quality

Melissa B. Gilkey; William A. Calo; Jennifer L. Moss; Parth D. Shah; Macary W. Marciniak; Noel T. Brewer

BACKGROUND Receiving a healthcare providers recommendation is a strong predictor of HPV vaccination, but little is known empirically about which types of recommendation are most influential. Thus, we sought to investigate the relationship between recommendation quality and HPV vaccination among U.S. adolescents. METHODS In 2014, we conducted a national, online survey of 1495 parents of 11-17-year-old adolescents. Parents reported whether providers endorsed HPV vaccination strongly, encouraged same-day vaccination, and discussed cancer prevention. Using an index of these quality indicators, we categorized parents as having received no, low-quality, or high-quality recommendations for HPV vaccination. Separate multivariable logistic regression models assessed associations between recommendation quality and HPV vaccine initiation (≥ 1 dose), follow through (3 doses, among initiators), refusal, and delay. RESULTS Almost half (48%) of parents reported no provider recommendation for HPV vaccination, while 16% received low-quality recommendations and 36% received high-quality recommendations. Compared to no recommendation, high-quality recommendations were associated with over nine times the odds of HPV vaccine initiation (23% vs. 74%, OR=9.31, 95% CI, 7.10-12.22) and over three times the odds of follow through (17% vs. 44%, OR=3.82, 95% CI, 2.39-6.11). Low-quality recommendations were more modestly associated with initiation (OR=4.13, 95% CI, 2.99-5.70), but not follow through. Parents who received high- versus low-quality recommendations less often reported HPV vaccine refusal or delay. CONCLUSIONS High-quality recommendations were strongly associated with HPV vaccination behavior, but only about one-third of parents received them. Interventions are needed to improve not only whether, but how providers recommend HPV vaccination for adolescents.


Expert Review of Vaccines | 2014

Promising alternative settings for HPV vaccination of US adolescents

Parth D. Shah; Melissa B. Gilkey; Jessica K. Pepper; Sami L. Gottlieb; Noel T. Brewer

Vaccination in alternative settings, defined here as being outside of traditional primary care, can help address the pressing public health problem of low human papillomavirus vaccine coverage among adolescents in the United States. Pharmacies are promising because they are highly accessible and have well established immunization practices. However, pharmacies currently face policy and reimbursement challenges. School-located mass vaccination programs are also promising because of their high reach and demonstrated success in providing other vaccines, but control by local policymakers and challenges in establishing community partnerships complicate widespread implementation. Health centers in schools are currently too few to greatly increase access to human papillomavirus vaccine. Specialty clinics have experience with vaccination, but the older age of their patient populations limits their reach. Future steps to making alternative settings a success include expanding their use of statewide vaccine registries and improving their coordination with primary care providers.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2013

Use of behavioral economics and social psychology to improve treatment of acute respiratory infections (BEARI): rationale and design of a cluster randomized controlled trial [1RC4AG039115-01] - study protocol and baseline practice and provider characteristics

Stephen D. Persell; Mark W. Friedberg; Daniella Meeker; Jeffrey A. Linder; Craig R. Fox; Noah J. Goldstein; Parth D. Shah; Tara K. Knight; Jason N. Doctor

BackgroundInappropriate antibiotic prescribing for nonbacterial infections leads to increases in the costs of care, antibiotic resistance among bacteria, and adverse drug events. Acute respiratory infections (ARIs) are the most common reason for inappropriate antibiotic use. Most prior efforts to decrease inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for ARIs (e.g., educational or informational interventions) have relied on the implicit assumption that clinicians inappropriately prescribe antibiotics because they are unaware of guideline recommendations for ARIs. If lack of guideline awareness is not the reason for inappropriate prescribing, educational interventions may have limited impact on prescribing rates. Instead, interventions that apply social psychological and behavioral economic principles may be more effective in deterring inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for ARIs by well-informed clinicians.Methods/designThe Application of Behavioral Economics to Improve the Treatment of Acute Respiratory Infections (BEARI) Trial is a multisite, cluster-randomized controlled trial with practice as the unit of randomization. The primary aim is to test the ability of three interventions based on behavioral economic principles to reduce the rate of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing for ARIs. We randomized practices in a 2 × 2 × 2 factorial design to receive up to three interventions for non-antibiotic-appropriate diagnoses: 1) Accountable Justifications: When prescribing an antibiotic for an ARI, clinicians are prompted to record an explicit justification that appears in the patient electronic health record; 2) Suggested Alternatives: Through computerized clinical decision support, clinicians prescribing an antibiotic for an ARI receive a list of non-antibiotic treatment choices (including prescription options) prior to completing the antibiotic prescription; and 3) Peer Comparison: Each provider’s rate of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing relative to top-performing peers is reported back to the provider periodically by email. We enrolled 269 clinicians (practicing attending physicians or advanced practice nurses) in 49 participating clinic sites and collected baseline data. The primary outcome is the antibiotic prescribing rate for office visits with non-antibiotic-appropriate ARI diagnoses. Secondary outcomes will examine antibiotic prescribing more broadly. The 18-month intervention period will be followed by a one year follow-up period to measure persistence of effects after interventions cease.DiscussionThe ongoing BEARI Trial will evaluate the effectiveness of behavioral economic strategies in reducing inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics.Trials registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01454947


Milbank Quarterly | 2018

Impact of Pharmacists on Access to Vaccine Providers: A Geospatial Analysis: Impact of Pharmacists on Access to Vaccines

Parth D. Shah; Justin G. Trogdon; Shelley D. Golden; Carol E. Golin; Macary W. Marciniak; Noel T. Brewer

Policy Points: Policymakers in the United States should consider expanding pharmacy practice laws to allow pharmacists to vaccinate adolescents as a way to improve geographic access to adolescent vaccines, particularly for human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, which has low uptake. Our state-level analysis showed that pharmacists are more geographically dispersed than primary care physicians in the US state of Texas. Including pharmacists among available adolescent vaccine providers would improve the geographic distribution of vaccine providers, especially in areas with an inadequate number of primary care physicians. CONTEXT The largest disparities in human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination in the United States are due to geography. One potential way of addressing these disparities is by improving geographic access to HPV vaccination. Two federal panels have recommended including community pharmacists as HPV vaccine providers as a strategy to improve opportunities for HPV vaccination for adolescents. We sought to evaluate whether community pharmacists can improve the number of vaccine providers in areas with primary care physician shortages in the US state of Texas. METHODS We gathered publicly available physician and pharmacist 2016 workforce data from the Texas Medical Board and Board of Pharmacy. We conducted geospatial analysis of census tracts to analyze the distribution of physicians and pharmacists and how pharmacists change vaccine provider coverage across the state. FINDINGS Census tracts with high numbers of physicians per capita tended to be located near one another, in 5 of 5 analyses of Morans I (median = .04). In contrast, pharmacist rates were not spatially dependent on census tract in any of our analyses. If pharmacists were added to primary care physicians as vaccine providers, 35% of urban census tracts that previously had inadequate coverage would be adequately covered, while 18% of inadequately covered rural census tracts would become adequately covered. Overall, when pharmacists were included with primary care physicians as vaccine providers, vaccine providers per capita increased in 2,413 of the 4,508 urban census tracts (54%), while the rate increased in 223 of 746 rural census tracts (30%). CONCLUSIONS Pharmacists are more geographically dispersed across census tracts than primary care physicians. As a result, adding pharmacists to the workforce would increase the availability of vaccine providers in areas with inadequate primary care provider coverage.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2016

Quality of Physician Communication about HPV Vaccine—Response

Melissa B. Gilkey; Teri L. Malo; Parth D. Shah; Megan E. Hall; Noel T. Brewer

We thank Osazuwa-Peters et al. ([1][1]) for their letter. While health professionals from various specialties can play a role in supporting adolescent immunization, primary care physicians are the most appropriate target for quality improvement efforts related to human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2015

Quality of Physician Communication about Human Papillomavirus Vaccine: Findings from a National Survey

Melissa B. Gilkey; Teri L. Malo; Parth D. Shah; Megan E. Hall; Noel T. Brewer


Preventive Medicine | 2015

Physician communication about adolescent vaccination: How is human papillomavirus vaccine different?

Melissa B. Gilkey; Jennifer L. Moss; Tamera Coyne-Beasley; Megan E. Hall; Parth D. Shah; Noel T. Brewer


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2016

Parents' Support for School-Entry Requirements for Human Papillomavirus Vaccination: A National Study

William A. Calo; Melissa B. Gilkey; Parth D. Shah; Jennifer L. Moss; Noel T. Brewer


Preventive Medicine | 2017

Parents' willingness to get human papillomavirus vaccination for their adolescent children at a pharmacy

William A. Calo; Melissa B. Gilkey; Parth D. Shah; Macary W. Marciniak; Noel T. Brewer


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2016

Messages to Motivate Human Papillomavirus Vaccination: National Studies of Parents and Physicians

Teri L. Malo; Melissa B. Gilkey; Megan E. Hall; Parth D. Shah; Noel T. Brewer

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Noel T. Brewer

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Melissa B. Gilkey

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Macary W. Marciniak

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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William A. Calo

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Megan E. Hall

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Carol E. Golin

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jennifer L. Moss

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Justin G. Trogdon

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Teri L. Malo

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Adam M. Zanation

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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