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電子書籍・電子雑誌JMA Journal
巻号7 (1)
Factors re...

Factors related to satisfaction with decision-making regarding human papillomavirus vaccination behavior among female university students in Japan

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Factors related to satisfaction with decision-making regarding human papillomavirus vaccination behavior among female university students in Japan

国立国会図書館永続的識別子
info:ndljp/pid/14495083
資料種別
記事
著者
Chie Kohほか
出版者
Japan Medical Association
出版年
2024-01-15
資料形態
デジタル
掲載誌名
JMA Journal 7(1)
掲載ページ
-
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<p><b>Introduction:</b> Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide. Most cervical cancers are caused by persistent infecti...

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デジタル

資料種別
記事
著者・編者
Chie Koh
Kaori Watanabe
Minako Saho
Yukari Nakajima
Miho Furuyama
Kanako Yamada
Yuichirou Nakai
出版年月日等
2024-01-15
出版年(W3CDTF)
2024-01-15
タイトル(掲載誌)
JMA Journal
巻号年月日等(掲載誌)
7(1)
掲載巻
7(1)
ISSN(掲載誌)
2433-3298
ISSN-L(掲載誌)
2433-328X
本文の言語コード
eng
国立国会図書館永続的識別子
info:ndljp/pid/14495083
コレクション(共通)
コレクション(障害者向け資料:レベル1)
コレクション(個別)
国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション > 電子書籍・電子雑誌 > その他
収集根拠
インターネット資料収集保存事業(WARP)
受理日(W3CDTF)
2025-10-21T09:04:40+09:00
保存日(W3CDTF)
2024-09-26
記録形式(IMT)
application/pdf
オンライン閲覧公開範囲
インターネット公開
遠隔複写可否(NDL)
不可
掲載誌(国立国会図書館永続的識別子)
info:ndljp/pid/14495078
連携機関・データベース
国立国会図書館 : 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション

デジタル

要約等
<p><b>Introduction:</b> Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide. Most cervical cancers are caused by persistent infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) acquired through sexual contact. Decision-making is the process of choosing among several options, and a better decision is one that the people engaged in the decision-making process express satisfaction with. Despite that HPV infection is associated with sexual behavior, no studies in Japan on HPV vaccination decision-making that include perspectives on sexuality exist. This study aimed to determine the factors that influence satisfaction with decision-making concerning HPV vaccination among female university students in Japan.</p><p><b>Methods:</b> The cross-sectional study was carried out by an anonymous self-administered questionnaire mail survey of 1988 female university students in Japan between April and July 2021. Of them, 301 agreed to participate in the survey. After the exclusion of those with missing data, the analysis included 252 (12.7%) students. We summarized descriptive statistics in terms of characteristics, satisfaction with decision-making regarding HPV vaccination, HPV vaccination behavior, knowledge, attitude about HPV vaccination, influencing factors, and perceptions and behaviors related to sexuality. Furthermore, we conducted multivariate analyses to investigate factors that influence satisfaction with decision-making regarding HPV vaccination.</p><p><b>Results:</b> Of the 252 participants, 102 (40.5%) were satisfied with their decisions regarding HPV vaccination. After adjustment for confounding factors, the multivariable-adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) for factors associated with satisfaction in decision-making regarding HPV vaccination were as follows: being vaccinated (vs. non-vaccinated) 5.46 (2.51-11.89), having high knowledge scores (vs. per 1 point) 1.09 (1.01-1.17), and having awareness about the risk of contracting sexually transmitted infections (STIs) via sexual intercourse (vs. per 1 point) 0.83 (0.72-0.96).</p><p><b>Conclusions:</b> Being vaccinated, having higher knowledge scores, and having lower awareness regarding the risk of STIs were associated with satisfied decision-making concerning HPV vaccination. Providing younger people with correct information about cervical cancer, HPV vaccines, and STI prevention contributes to increased satisfaction with their HPV vaccination decisions.</p>
DOI
10.31662/jmaj.2022-0214
オンライン閲覧公開範囲
インターネット公開
連携機関・データベース
科学技術振興機構 : J-STAGE

デジタル

要約等
<p><b>Introduction:</b> Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide. Most cervical cancers are caused by persistent infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) acquired through sexual contact. Decision-making is the process of choosing among several options, and a better decision is one that the people engaged in the decision-making process express satisfaction with. Despite that HPV infection is associated with sexual behavior, no studies in Japan on HPV vaccination decision-making that include perspectives on sexuality exist. This study aimed to determine the factors that influence satisfaction with decision-making concerning HPV vaccination among female university students in Japan.</p><p><b>Methods:</b> The cross-sectional study was carried out by an anonymous self-administered questionnaire mail survey of 1988 female university students in Japan between April and July 2021. Of them, 301 agreed to participate in the survey. After the exclusion of those with missing data, the analysis included 252 (12.7%) students. We summarized descriptive statistics in terms of characteristics, satisfaction with decision-making regarding HPV vaccination, HPV vaccination behavior, knowledge, attitude about HPV vaccination, influencing factors, and perceptions and behaviors related to sexuality. Furthermore, we conducted multivariate analyses to investigate factors that influence satisfaction with decision-making regarding HPV vaccination.</p><p><b>Results:</b> Of the 252 participants, 102 (40.5%) were satisfied with their decisions regarding HPV vaccination. After adjustment for confounding factors, the multivariable-adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) for factors associated with satisfaction in decision-making regarding HPV vaccination were as follows: being vaccinated (vs. non-vaccinated) 5.46 (2.51-11.89), having high knowledge scores (vs. per 1 point) 1.09 (1.01-1.17), and having awareness about the risk of contracting sexually transmitted infections (STIs) via sexual intercourse (vs. per 1 point) 0.83 (0.72-0.96).</p><p><b>Conclusions:</b> Being vaccinated, having higher knowledge scores, and having lower awareness regarding the risk of STIs were associated with satisfied decision-making concerning HPV vaccination. Providing younger people with correct information about cervical cancer, HPV vaccines, and STI prevention contributes to increased satisfaction with their HPV vaccination decisions.</p>
参照
Effects of different educational interventions on cervical cancer knowledge and human papillomavirus vaccination uptake among young women in Japan: Preliminary results of a cluster randomized controlled trial
連携機関・データベース
国立情報学研究所 : CiNii Research
提供元機関・データベース
Japan Link Center
雑誌記事索引データベース
Crossref
Crossref
書誌ID(NDLBibID)
14495083