Preferences for Sexually Transmitted Infection and Cancer Vaccines in the United States and in China

Abram L. Wagner*, Yihan Lu, Cara B. Janusz, Stephen W. Pan, Brian Glover, Zhenke Wu, Lisa A. Prosser

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objectives: This study assessed preferences for hypothetical vaccines for children in 2 large vaccine markets according to how the vaccine-preventable disease is transmitted via a discrete choice experiment. Methods: Surveys in China (N = 1350) and the United States (N = 1413) were conducted from April to May 2021. The discrete choice experiment included attributes of cost, age at vaccination, transmission mode of the vaccine-preventable disease, and whether the vaccine prevents cancer. Preference utilities were modeled in a Bayesian, multinomial logistic regression model, and respondents were grouped by vaccine preference classification through a latent class analysis. Results: Individuals favored vaccines against diseases with transmission modes other than sexual transmission (vaccine for sexually transmitted infection [STI] vs airborne disease, in the United States, odds ratio 0.71; 95% credible interval 0.64-0.78; in China, odds ratio 0.76; 95% credible interval 0.69-0.84). The latent class analysis revealed 6 classes: vaccine rejecters (19% in the United States and 8% in China), careful deciders (18% and 17%), preferring cancer vaccination (20% and 19%), preferring vaccinating children at older ages (10% and 11%), preferring vaccinating older ages, but indifferent about cancer vaccines (23% and 25%), and preferring vaccinating children at younger ages (10% and 19%). Vaccine rejection was higher with age in the United States versus more vaccine rejection among those at the age of 18 to 24 and ≥ 64 years in China. Conclusion: The public had strong preferences against giving their child an STI vaccine, and the class preferring a cancer vaccine was less accepting of an STI vaccine. Overall, this study points to the need for more education about how some STI vaccines could also prevent cancers.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)261-268
Number of pages8
JournalValue in Health
Volume26
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2022

Keywords

  • conjoint analysis
  • human papillomavirus vaccines
  • immunization programs
  • latent class analysis
  • stated choice experiment
  • surveys and questionnaires

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Preferences for Sexually Transmitted Infection and Cancer Vaccines in the United States and in China'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this