DWDan Wu
Papers(1)
Feasibility and Accep…
Collaborators(6)
Jing LiKatherine T. LiShengyue QiuYifan LiYu HeChuanyu Qin
Institutions(6)
Nanjing Medical Unive…Hinova Pharmaceutical…University Of Califor…Sichuan UniversityCancer Hospital of Ch…Unknown Institution

Papers

Feasibility and Acceptability of Pay-it-forward in Increasing Uptake of HPV Vaccination among 15- to 18-Year-Old Girls in China: Pilot RCT Results

Abstract China has a low human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination rate due to limited public funding and mistrust in domestic vaccines. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of an innovative pay-it-forward strategy to improve HPV vaccine uptake among adolescent girls. Conducted at a community health center in Western China (January 4–February 18, 2022), the study recruited 100 adolescent girls (ages 15–18 years) with no prior HPV vaccination. Participants were randomly assigned to either the standard-of-care arm (self-paid vaccines, n = 50) or the pay-it-forward arm (subsidized vaccines, handwritten postcards, and the opportunity to donate and/or write postcards, n = 50). Feasibility was assessed through recruitment, retention, and questionnaire completion rates. Acceptability and feasibility were measured using a standard scale. Preliminary effectiveness was evaluated by first-dose vaccination rate. Of 109 screened participants, 100 were eligible to participate (91.7%). The retention rate was 100% in both arms. The questionnaire completion rate was 98% (49/50) in the pay-it-forward arm and 82% (41/50) in the standard-of-care arm. Most participants self-reported that the strategy was feasible (97.6%, 41/42) and acceptable (90.5%, 38/42). Ninety-seven percent (97/100) of participants made vaccination appointments. The first-dose HPV vaccine uptake rate was 98% (49/50) in the pay-it-forward arm and 82% (41/50) in the standard-of-care arm (P < 0.05). No serious adverse events were identified. The pay-it-forward strategy was feasible and acceptable and showed preliminary effectiveness in increasing HPV vaccination uptake. Further refinement and population-based recruitment are needed to better reflect local contexts and enhance the generalizability of the formal trial. Prevention Relevance: The results of this pilot study demonstrate that the pay-it-forward strategy is both feasible and acceptable in increasing HPV vaccine uptake among 15- to 18-year-old girls. The future use of this strategy holds promise as an effective approach to enhance HPV vaccination rates that will eventually lead to a reduction in cervical cancer incidence.

158Works
1Papers
6Collaborators

Positions

Researcher

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

2023–

Professor

Nanjing Medical University · Social Medicine and Health Education

2021–

Director

SESH · Research

2021–

Assistant Professor

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine · Clinical Research

2019–

Newton International Fellow

The Academy of Medical Sciences

2018–

Honorary research associate at

The University of Hong Kong · Family Medicine and Primary Care

2017–

Postdoctoral research fellow

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Project China

2009–

Resident

Zhejiang University School of Medicine First Affiliated Hospital

2008–

Intern

Southern Medical University Nanfang Hospital

Education

2017

PhD candidate

University of Hong Kong · Family Medicine

2012

2. Master of Science

University College London · Institute for Global Health

2009

Bachelor

Southern Medical University · Clinical Medicine

Country

CN

Keywords
Family medicine; primary care; sexual health; infectious diseases; violence
Links & IDs
0000-0003-0415-5467

Scopus: 57202257204