STEMM Institute Press
Science, Technology, Engineering, Management and Medicine
Investigation on HPV Vaccine Vaccination Intention and Behavior Among Adult Women and Analysis of Influencing Factors
DOI: https://doi.org/10.62517/jmhs.202505409
Author(s)
Weizhen Yan
Affiliation(s)
School of Medicine, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
Abstract
Objective: To analyze the HPV vaccine vaccination behavior and intention of adult women, and evaluate the factors influencing HPV vaccine vaccination among adult women. Methods: A questionnaire survey was conducted among adult women in communities or residential areas around hospitals using electronic questionnaires to analyze their HPV vaccine vaccination behavior and intention. A total of 1,000 electronic questionnaires were distributed, and 956 valid questionnaires were recovered. The analysis was based on these 956 valid questionnaires. Results: According to the survey, among the 956 adult women surveyed, 243 had received the HPV vaccine, and 656 had the intention to be vaccinated. The survey showed that there were multiple factors influencing adult women's intention to receive the HPV vaccine, including educational level, whether they had received popular science publicity on cervical cancer and HPV, and age. Conclusion: There are many factors influencing adult women's intention to receive the HPV vaccine. Effective intervention measures should be taken in a timely manner to help adult women recognize the importance of HPV vaccination and actively receive the vaccine.
Keywords
Adult Women; HPV Vaccine; Vaccination Intention; Vaccination Behavior; Influencing Factors
References
[1] Wang Yuelin, Jiang Yunlan, Li Le, et al. Meta-analysis of the current status of HPV vaccine vaccination intention and its influencing factors among college students in China [J]. Modern Preventive Medicine, 2025, 52(18): 3424-3431. [2] Wang Qizhang, Ding Meihua, Yang Dandan, et al. Investigation on HPV vaccine vaccination intention and behavior among adult women in Pudong New Area and analysis of influencing factors [J]. Maternal and Child Health Care of China, 2025, 40(10): 1857-1861. [3] Wang Ruosi, Wang Yan, Na Chen, et al. Mothers' intention to have their minor daughters vaccinated against HPV and its influencing factors: an analysis based on Logistic regression and decision tree model [J]. Chinese Journal of Women and Children Health Research, 2025, 36(04): 15-23. [4] Yang Xinyi, Dang Le, Zhang Ping, et al. Analysis of HPV vaccine vaccination intention and influencing factors among adult women based on the Health Belief Model [J]. Chinese Journal of Clinical Oncology and Rehabilitation, 2025, 32(03): 170-181. [5] Li Yifan, Hu Yunqian, Liu Lirong. Influence of new media exposure behavior on college students' HPV vaccine vaccination intention — a study based on the Protection Motivation Theory [J]. Journal of Contemporary Communication, 2025, 33(02): 27-31. [6] Tang Li. Analysis of HPV cognition and influencing factors of vaccine vaccination intention among 1,803 college students [J]. Preventive Medicine Tribune, 2025, 31(01): 50-54+60. [7] Shi Jing, Zhao Chunyan, Sun Yuanjie, et al. Analysis of HPV vaccine vaccination intention and influencing factors among college students in Tongzhou District, Beijing [J]. Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2024, 25(10): 1278-1283.
Copyright @ 2020-2035 STEMM Institute Press All Rights Reserved