Investigator

Matthew Hickman

Professor in Public Health & Epidemiology · UNSW Sydney, National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre

MHMatthew Hickman
Papers(1)
Secondary analyses to…
Collaborators(1)
Harriet Fisher
Institutions(1)
University Of Bristol

Papers

Secondary analyses to test the impact on inequalities and uptake of the schools-based human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programme by stage of implementation of a new consent policy in the south-west of England

Objectives To test the impact on inequalities and uptake of the schools-based human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programme by stage of implementation of a new policy providing additional opportunities to consent. Setting Two local authorities in the south-west of England. Participants Young women (n=7129) routinely eligible for HPV vaccination aged 12–13 years during the intervention period (2017/2018 to 2018/2019 programme years). Interventions Local policy change that included additional opportunities to provide consent (parental verbal consent and adolescent self-consent). Outcomes Secondary analyses of cross-sectional intervention data were undertaken to examine uptake by: (1) receipt of parental written consent forms and; (2) percentage of unvaccinated young women by stage of implementation. Results During the intervention period, 6341 (89.0%) eligible young women initiated the HPV vaccination series. Parental written consent forms were less likely to be returned where young women attended alternative education provider settings (p<0.001), belonged to non-white British ethnic groups (p<0.01) or more deprived quintiles (p<0.001). Implementation of parental verbal consent and adolescent self-consent reduced the percentage of unvaccinated young women from 21.3% to 16.5% (risk difference: 4.8%). The effect was greater for young women belonging to the most deprived compared with the least deprived quintile (risk difference: 7.4% vs 2.3%, p<0.001), and for young women classified as Unknown ethnic category compared with white British young women (6.7% vs 4.2%, p<0.001). No difference was found for non-white British young women (5.4%, p<0.21). Conclusions Local policy change to consent procedures that allowed parents to consent verbally and adolescents to self-consent overcame some of the barriers to vaccination of young women belonging to families less likely to respond to paper-based methods of gaining consent and at greater risk of developing cervical cancer. Trial registration number 49 086 105.

729Works
1Papers
1Collaborators

Positions

2024–

Professor in Public Health & Epidemiology

UNSW Sydney · National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre

2022–

Academic , Professor in Public Health and Epidemiology

The University of Bristol · Bristol Medical School (PHS)

2017–

Member

The University of Bristol · Bristol Population Health Science Institute

2014–

Group lead

The University of Bristol · Health Protection Research Unit (HPRU)

2012–

Member

The University of Bristol · Centre for Academic Mental Health

2009–

Member

The University of Bristol · Infection and Immunity

2005–

Member

The University of Bristol · Centre for Academic Primary Care