The school nurse, the school and HPV vaccination: A qualitative study of factors affecting HPV vaccine uptake

Loretta Brabin, Rebecca Stretch, Stephen A Roberts, Peter Elton, David Baxter, Rosemary McCann

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

School nurses in the United Kingdom are largely responsible for delivering the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine to 12-13 year old girls. In order to assess the impact of HPV vaccination on school nurses' roles, we gave a questionnaire to all 33 school nurses who offered Cervarix ™ in two Primary Care Trusts one year ahead of the national vaccine programme. Key organisational issues raised by the school nurses were the size of the team and its skill mix. A few found their schools uncooperative and were dissatisfied with mechanisms for problem resolution. On average, nurses spent an additional 69. h (0.80. h per child) on vaccine-related activities. In semi-qualitative interviews (n=17), school nurses complained of work overload and described the difficulties of establishing good relationships with some of their schools. Nurses expected schools to take some responsibility for ensuring good uptake and were frustrated when help was not forthcoming. We conclude that variation in uptake between schools in part reflects a difficult relationship with the school nurse which may be attributed to characteristics of the school, schools' attitudes towards health interventions, organisational problems, multiple school nurse roles and/or personal ability. Some of these issues will need to be addressed to ensure continued high vaccine coverage as HPV vaccination becomes a less prioritised, routine activity. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3192-3196
Number of pages4
JournalVaccine
Volume29
Issue number17
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Apr 2011

Keywords

  • HPV vaccination
  • Roles
  • School nurses
  • Schools
  • Workload

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