Taking an HPV vaccine research-tested intervention to scale in a clinical setting

Suellen Hopfer, Anne E Ray, Michael L Hecht, Michelle Miller-Day, Rhonda Belue, Gregory Zimet, W Douglas Evans, Francis X McKee, Suellen Hopfer, Anne E Ray, Michael L Hecht, Michelle Miller-Day, Rhonda Belue, Gregory Zimet, W Douglas Evans, Francis X McKee

Abstract

Research tested interventions are seldom ready for wide spread use. Successful intervention adaptation to clinical settings demands an iterative process with target audience feedback. We describe the adaptation process of implementing an NCI research tested HPV vaccine intervention, Women's Stories, to a community clinic context (Planned Parenthood). Five phases are described for the adaptation of content and the development of a health kiosk intervention delivery system: (a) informant interviews with the target audience of young adult, predominantly African-American women, (b) translating HPV vaccine decision narratives into prevention messages, (c) health kiosk interface design, (d) conducting a usability study of the health kiosk intervention product, and (e) conducting a waiting room observational study. Lessons learned and challenges in adapting prevention interventions to clinical settings are discussed.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Screenshot of woman who delivers monologue & screen description
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Intervention graphic of 4 HPV vaccine decision stories
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Kiosk interface of female anatomy with talk bubble
Fig. 4
Fig. 4
Women’s stories health kiosk in planned parenthood clinic waiting room

Source: PubMed

Подписаться