Abstract
This longitudinal study reports on the development and evaluation of a narrative intervention aimed at increasing human papillomavirus
(HPV) vaccination among college women. The prevention of HPV is a public health priority due to its pervasiveness and relationship
to cervical cancer, the second leading cause of cancer deaths among women worldwide. Pilot work utilizing culture-centric
narrative theory guided development of the intervention content. Exemplification theory led to hypotheses comparing communication
sources of the narrative messages (peer only, medical expert only, or a combination of the two source types) in a four-arm
randomized controlled trial (N = 404; 18–26 year olds). The combined peer-expert narrative intervention nearly doubled vaccination compared to controls
(22% vs. 12%). The pragmatic goal of increasing HPV vaccination and the theoretical predictions about message source were
supported. As predicted, the inclusion of peer and medical expert sources plays a critical role in promoting HPV vaccination
among college women. Furthermore, the intervention increased HPV vaccination by increasing vaccine self-efficacy and intent.
Theoretical and practical implications for designing effective HPV vaccine messages are discussed.
(HPV) vaccination among college women. The prevention of HPV is a public health priority due to its pervasiveness and relationship
to cervical cancer, the second leading cause of cancer deaths among women worldwide. Pilot work utilizing culture-centric
narrative theory guided development of the intervention content. Exemplification theory led to hypotheses comparing communication
sources of the narrative messages (peer only, medical expert only, or a combination of the two source types) in a four-arm
randomized controlled trial (N = 404; 18–26 year olds). The combined peer-expert narrative intervention nearly doubled vaccination compared to controls
(22% vs. 12%). The pragmatic goal of increasing HPV vaccination and the theoretical predictions about message source were
supported. As predicted, the inclusion of peer and medical expert sources plays a critical role in promoting HPV vaccination
among college women. Furthermore, the intervention increased HPV vaccination by increasing vaccine self-efficacy and intent.
Theoretical and practical implications for designing effective HPV vaccine messages are discussed.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-10
- DOI 10.1007/s11121-011-0254-1
- Authors
- Suellen Hopfer, The Pennsylvania State University, The Methodology Center, 204 E. Calder Way, Suite 400, State College, PA 16801, USA
- Journal Prevention Science
- Online ISSN 1573-6695
- Print ISSN 1389-4986