Vaccination intentions and related factors for human papillomavirus vaccination among male college students in Shanghai
10.16835/j.cnki.1000-9817.2026031
- VernacularTitle:上海市大学男生人乳头瘤病毒疫苗接种意愿及相关因素
- Author:
WU Huamei, CHEN Xing, ZHANG Luying
1
Author Information
1. School of Urban Operation and Management, Shanghai Urban Construction Vocational College, Shanghai 200438, China
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Papillomavirus vaccines;Vaccination;Attitude;Regression analysis;Students;Male
- From:
Chinese Journal of School Health
2026;47(1):46-50
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To investigate the current status and related factors of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination intention among male college students in Shanghai, so as to provide references for promoting HPV vaccination among males.
Methods:From January to February 2025, a stratified random cluster sampling method was used to select 548 male college students in 10 universities from Shanghai for a self questionnaire survey. The survey included socio demographic characteristics, vaccine hesitancy, vaccine beliefs (complacency, confidence, convenience), HPV knowledge level, health status, social support, and information acquisition channels. Latent class analysis (LCA) was used to identify latent classes of vaccine beliefs, and multinomial Logistic regression was used to analyze the related factors of vaccination intentions.
Results:The acceptance, hesitancy, and refusal rates of HPV vaccine among college students in Shanghai were 39.4% ( n =216), 35.2% ( n =193), and 25.4% ( n =139), respectively. LCA identified four vaccine belief groups: low complacency high confidence (21.4%), high complacency high confidence (36.1%), low complacency low confidence (18.8%), and high complacency low confidence (23.7%). Multinomial Logistic regression showed that vaccine belief category was an important factor affecting vaccination intentions among college students in Shanghai. Compared with the low complacency high confidence group, high complacency low confidence group had the highest risk of vaccine refusal ( OR =24.80, P <0.05). Medical majors ( OR =0.13), participation in basic medical insurance ( OR =0.37), and recommendations from relatives, friends ( OR =0.39) or healthcare professionals ( OR =0.33) reduced the risk of vaccine refusal among male college students in Shanghai (all P <0.05). The Internet (70.6%) was the main source of HPV related information for male college students, and recommendations from healthcare professionals were associated with more positive vaccination intentions.
Conclusions:HPV vaccine hesitancy and refusal are common among male college students in Shanghai, with significant heterogeneity in vaccine belief structures. Targeted health education based on belief categories should be conducted to improve the vaccination intentions of male college students.