Cargando…

Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study

BACKGROUND: Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine hesitancy is on the rise, and provider communication is a first-line strategy to address parental concerns. The use of the presumptive approach and motivational interviewing by providers may not be enough to influence parental decision-making owing to t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cunningham-Erves, Jennifer, Wilkins, Consuelo H, Dempsey, Amanda F, Jones, Jessica L, Thompson, Chris, Edwards, Kathryn, Davis, Megan, Mayberry, Lindsay S, Landsittal, Douglas, Hull, Pamela C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10132044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37014680
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/43041
_version_ 1785031314592759808
author Cunningham-Erves, Jennifer
Wilkins, Consuelo H
Dempsey, Amanda F
Jones, Jessica L
Thompson, Chris
Edwards, Kathryn
Davis, Megan
Mayberry, Lindsay S
Landsittal, Douglas
Hull, Pamela C
author_facet Cunningham-Erves, Jennifer
Wilkins, Consuelo H
Dempsey, Amanda F
Jones, Jessica L
Thompson, Chris
Edwards, Kathryn
Davis, Megan
Mayberry, Lindsay S
Landsittal, Douglas
Hull, Pamela C
author_sort Cunningham-Erves, Jennifer
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine hesitancy is on the rise, and provider communication is a first-line strategy to address parental concerns. The use of the presumptive approach and motivational interviewing by providers may not be enough to influence parental decision-making owing to the providers’ limited time, self-efficacy, and skills to implement these strategies. Interventions to enhance provider communication and build parental HPV vaccine confidence have been undertested. Delivering tailored patient education to parents via mobile phones before they visit the health care provider may address time constraints during clinic visits and positively affect vaccine uptake. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to describe the development and evaluate the acceptability of a mobile phone–based, family-focused intervention guided by theory to address concerns of HPV vaccine–hesitant parents before the clinic visit, as well as explore intervention use to facilitate parent-child communication. METHODS: The health belief model and theory of reasoned action guided intervention content development. A multilevel stakeholder engagement process was used to iteratively develop the HPVVaxFacts intervention, including a community advisory board review, a review by an advisory panel comprising HPV vaccine–hesitant parents, a health communications expert review, semistructured qualitative interviews with HPV vaccine–hesitant parents (n=31) and providers (n=15), and a content expert review. Inductive thematic analysis was used to identify themes in the interview data. RESULTS: The qualitative interviews yielded 4 themes: overall views toward mobile device use for health information, acceptability of HPVVaxFacts, facilitators of HPVVaxFacts use, and barriers to HPVVaxFacts use. In parent interviews after reviewing HPVVaxFacts prototypes, almost all parents (29/31, 94%) stated they intended to have their child vaccinated. Most of the parents stated that they liked the added adolescents’ corner to engage in optional parent-child communication (ie, choice to share and discuss information with their child; 27/31, 87%) and shared decision-making in some cases (8/31, 26%). After incorporating all input, the final intervention consisted of a 10-item survey to identify the top 3 concerns of parents, followed by tailored education that was mapped to each of the following concerns: evidential messages, images or graphics to enhance comprehension and address low literacy, links to credible websites, a provider video, suggested questions to ask their child’s physician, and an optional adolescents’ corner to educate the patient and support parent-child communication. CONCLUSIONS: The multilevel stakeholder-engaged process used to iteratively develop this novel intervention for HPV vaccine–hesitant families can be used as a model to develop future mobile health interventions. This intervention is currently being pilot-tested in preparation for a randomized controlled trial aiming to increase HPV vaccination among adolescent children of vaccine-hesitant parents in a clinic setting. Future research can adapt HPVVaxFacts for other vaccines and use in other settings (eg, health departments and pharmacies).
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10132044
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101320442023-04-27 Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study Cunningham-Erves, Jennifer Wilkins, Consuelo H Dempsey, Amanda F Jones, Jessica L Thompson, Chris Edwards, Kathryn Davis, Megan Mayberry, Lindsay S Landsittal, Douglas Hull, Pamela C JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine hesitancy is on the rise, and provider communication is a first-line strategy to address parental concerns. The use of the presumptive approach and motivational interviewing by providers may not be enough to influence parental decision-making owing to the providers’ limited time, self-efficacy, and skills to implement these strategies. Interventions to enhance provider communication and build parental HPV vaccine confidence have been undertested. Delivering tailored patient education to parents via mobile phones before they visit the health care provider may address time constraints during clinic visits and positively affect vaccine uptake. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to describe the development and evaluate the acceptability of a mobile phone–based, family-focused intervention guided by theory to address concerns of HPV vaccine–hesitant parents before the clinic visit, as well as explore intervention use to facilitate parent-child communication. METHODS: The health belief model and theory of reasoned action guided intervention content development. A multilevel stakeholder engagement process was used to iteratively develop the HPVVaxFacts intervention, including a community advisory board review, a review by an advisory panel comprising HPV vaccine–hesitant parents, a health communications expert review, semistructured qualitative interviews with HPV vaccine–hesitant parents (n=31) and providers (n=15), and a content expert review. Inductive thematic analysis was used to identify themes in the interview data. RESULTS: The qualitative interviews yielded 4 themes: overall views toward mobile device use for health information, acceptability of HPVVaxFacts, facilitators of HPVVaxFacts use, and barriers to HPVVaxFacts use. In parent interviews after reviewing HPVVaxFacts prototypes, almost all parents (29/31, 94%) stated they intended to have their child vaccinated. Most of the parents stated that they liked the added adolescents’ corner to engage in optional parent-child communication (ie, choice to share and discuss information with their child; 27/31, 87%) and shared decision-making in some cases (8/31, 26%). After incorporating all input, the final intervention consisted of a 10-item survey to identify the top 3 concerns of parents, followed by tailored education that was mapped to each of the following concerns: evidential messages, images or graphics to enhance comprehension and address low literacy, links to credible websites, a provider video, suggested questions to ask their child’s physician, and an optional adolescents’ corner to educate the patient and support parent-child communication. CONCLUSIONS: The multilevel stakeholder-engaged process used to iteratively develop this novel intervention for HPV vaccine–hesitant families can be used as a model to develop future mobile health interventions. This intervention is currently being pilot-tested in preparation for a randomized controlled trial aiming to increase HPV vaccination among adolescent children of vaccine-hesitant parents in a clinic setting. Future research can adapt HPVVaxFacts for other vaccines and use in other settings (eg, health departments and pharmacies). JMIR Publications 2023-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10132044/ /pubmed/37014680 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/43041 Text en ©Jennifer Cunningham-Erves, Consuelo H Wilkins, Amanda F Dempsey, Jessica L Jones, Chris Thompson, Kathryn Edwards, Megan Davis, Lindsay S Mayberry, Douglas Landsittal, Pamela C Hull. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 04.04.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Cunningham-Erves, Jennifer
Wilkins, Consuelo H
Dempsey, Amanda F
Jones, Jessica L
Thompson, Chris
Edwards, Kathryn
Davis, Megan
Mayberry, Lindsay S
Landsittal, Douglas
Hull, Pamela C
Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study
title Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study
title_full Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study
title_fullStr Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study
title_short Development of a Tailored Mobile Phone–Based Intervention to Facilitate Parent-Child Communication and Build Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Confidence: Formative Qualitative Study
title_sort development of a tailored mobile phone–based intervention to facilitate parent-child communication and build human papillomavirus vaccine confidence: formative qualitative study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10132044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37014680
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/43041
work_keys_str_mv AT cunninghamervesjennifer developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT wilkinsconsueloh developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT dempseyamandaf developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT jonesjessical developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT thompsonchris developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT edwardskathryn developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT davismegan developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT mayberrylindsays developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT landsittaldouglas developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy
AT hullpamelac developmentofatailoredmobilephonebasedinterventiontofacilitateparentchildcommunicationandbuildhumanpapillomavirusvaccineconfidenceformativequalitativestudy