At a glance
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HPV ECHO: Increasing the Adoption of Evidence-based Communication Strategies for HPV Vaccination in Rural Primary Care Practices
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Project ECHO, Announcement Approach Training, and 1 other intervention for Human Papillomavirus Vaccines and Adolescent Health Services. Completed, enrolled 30 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The safe, highly-effective human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine remains underused in the US; only 51% of 13- to 17-year-old girls and boys were up-to-date by 2018. The Announcement Approach Training is effective in increasing HPV vaccine uptake during the clinic visit by training providers to make strong vaccine recommendations and answer parents' common questions. Systems communication like recall notifications also improve vaccination by reducing missed clinical opportunities. Although never tested to support HPV vaccination, the ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) Model is a proven implementation strategy to promote capacity exchange between health care experts at academic centers and primary care providers at the front line of rural community health care. The trial will test the effectiveness of two ECHO-delivered HPV vaccination communication interventions versus control: HPV ECHO will provide Announcement Approach training, and HPV ECHO+ will provide training plus recall notices to communicate with parents who initially decline vaccination.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Using proven adult learning techniques and interactive video technology, the ECHO Model promotes knowledge exchange between experts or specialists at centers of excellence ("the hub") and primary care providers (the "spokes), typically located in rural settings. Through regular real-time collaborative sessions, the spokes connect with the hub and with other spokes to discuss 1) best practices in care and 2) complex cases managed within their practice.
Train physicians and their clinic staff to make strong HPV vaccine recommendations by using presumptive announcements. If parents show vaccine hesitancy, the Training train physicians a 3-step approach (Connect, Clarify, Counsel) to share effective, evidence-based messages about HPV vaccine.
Notify parents that their child is behind for HPV vaccination. Recall notices will include research-tested messages to specifically address parent concerns. Recall notices will be sent to parents via patient portal or email communication.