Las Vegas Review-Journal

HPV vaccine rate in Nevada improving

Better educated parents and practition­ers helped move the needle

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

Nevada’s future is bright when it comes to HPV vaccinatio­n rates.

That’s the word from Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases, who visited the Southern Nevada Health District on Friday.

“That’s a testament to the partnershi­p of public health and private providers who really have worked together to accomplish that,” Messonnier said. She was invited to Las Vegas by local health officials celebratin­g National Infant Immunizati­on Week.

Nevada ranks 15th in the nation for its first-dose HPV vaccinatio­n rate:

64.9 percent. Though the CDC recommende­d three doses of the shot when the vaccine launched a decade ago, it changed that recommenda­tion in 2016 to two doses, which Messonnier said should help raise the vaccinatio­n coverage rate nationwide.

“I’d say Nevada is doing great, much better (than in prior years), but none of us are really where we want to be,” Messionnie­r explained.

About 48 percent of Nevada teens received two doses in 2016, according to the latest CDC data, well below the 80 percent goal outlined in the federal Healthy People 2020 objectives.

The HPV vaccine, which protects against the cancer-causing human papillomav­irus in both men and women, is recommende­d at ages 11 and 12 by the CDC. Both the meningococ­cal vaccine and Tdap — tetanus, diptheria and acellular pertussis — are recommende­d for the same age group.

Still, Tdap and meningococ­cal vaccine rates are higher than that of the HPV vaccine. In part, that’s because there was misinforma­tion and stigma surroundin­g the vaccine when it was released. HPV, so common that most people will be infected in their lifetime, is transmitte­d

HPV

through vaginal, oral or anal sex with someone who has the virus. Nine out of 10 times, the body clears the infection on its own.

“I think one of the things that not everybody realizes is HPV is so prevalent,” said Heidi Parker, director for Immunize Nevada, a nonprofit organizati­on that provides education and outreach on the importance of immunizati­on. “We have to talk about it to make it more normalized.”

HPV vaccinatio­n rates have been increasing steadily, and Messonnier said she expects that trend to continue. She attributed gains in vaccine coverage to better education among parents and practition­ers.

“It was folks … putting in that hard work to make sure that parents had access to the vaccine when they needed to protect their kids,” she said.

The multi-dose requiremen­t to be protected against HPV cancers has been a barrier to increasing vaccinatio­n rates, but maybe not for long. Messonnier said there’s ongoing research internatio­nally on a single-dose vaccine.

Meanwhile, Parker is celebratin­g. Nevada may rank at the bottom on many health measures, including access to a health provider and mental health resources, but its HPV vaccinatio­n rates are a point of pride, she said.

“This is a good example that we can do it,” Parker said. “We can make those health care changes. It takes time, it takes effort and resources, but it is possible.”

Contact Jessie Bekker at jbekker@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4563. Follow @jessiebekk­s on Twitter.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Attendees of Friday’s Baby Bash peruse health-related vendors at the Southern Nevada Health District. Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Attendees of Friday’s Baby Bash peruse health-related vendors at the Southern Nevada Health District. Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e

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