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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07498075

A Randomized Trial of Digital Interventions to Increase HPV Vaccination Intentions Among Nigerian Caregivers

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
3,340 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Pennsylvania · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
27 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study evaluates whether different types of digital health communication can increase parents' intention to vaccinate their daughters against human papillomavirus (HPV) in Nigeria. HPV vaccination is recommended for girls aged 9-14 years and helps prevent cervical cancer, yet vaccination rates remain low. Parents of eligible, unvaccinated girls will be randomly assigned to receive one of several types of digital content delivered online. These include: (1) a short chatbot conversation based on motivational interviewing principles, (2) an interactive game designed to help parents recognize and resist common forms of vaccine misinformation, (3) a set of short edutainment videos about HPV vaccination, (4) standard informational infographics about HPV vaccination from a national public health agency, or (5) unrelated health content about menstruation. The main outcome is parents' self-reported intention to vaccinate their daughter against HPV, measured immediately and one week after exposure to the assigned content. Additional outcomes include HPV-related knowledge, perceptions of vaccine safety, willingness to recommend the vaccine to others, and self-reported vaccine uptake at 1-week and 3 month follow-up. The results will help inform scalable communication strategies to improve HPV vaccination uptake in low- and middle-income settings.

Detailed description

Cervical cancer remains a leading cause of cancer-related mortality among women in Nigeria. Persistent infection with high-risk types of human papillomavirus (HPV) is the primary cause of cervical cancer, and safe, effective vaccines are available and recommended for girls aged 9-14 years. Despite national and global efforts to expand access, HPV vaccination coverage in Nigeria remains low. Parental hesitancy, misinformation, limited knowledge, and lack of engagement with existing health communication materials are key barriers. This randomized controlled trial examines whether different forms of digital communication can increase HPV vaccination intention among parents of unvaccinated, vaccine-eligible girls in Nigeria. The study focuses on scalable, low-cost interventions that could be deployed through mobile phones and other digital platforms. Eligible participants are parents or primary caregivers of at least one unvaccinated girl aged 9-14 years. Participants will be individually randomized in equal proportions to one of five conditions: A motivational interviewing-style chatbot that provides brief, interactive counseling adapted from World Health Organization vaccination guidance. A short interactive "pre-bunking" game designed to build resistance to common forms of HPV vaccine misinformation. A series of short edutainment videos providing information about HPV, cervical cancer prevention, and HPV vaccination in the Nigerian context. A standard informational control consisting of existing HPV vaccination infographics produced by Nigeria's National Primary Health Care Development Agency. An unrelated-content attention control consisting of infographics on menstruation awareness produced by a Nigerian health advocacy organization. All content will be delivered digitally. Participants will complete baseline measures prior to randomization and follow-up surveys after exposure to the assigned content. The primary outcome is self-reported intention to vaccinate the selected daughter against HPV, measured immediately and one week post-intervention on a numeric scale. Secondary outcomes include HPV and vaccine-related knowledge, perceived vaccine safety, willingness to recommend the HPV vaccine to other parents, and self-reported HPV vaccine uptake. Additional intention measures will be collected 1-week after the intervention and at three months post-intervention, with vaccine uptake assessed at the three-month follow-up. Primary analyses will be conducted under an intention-to-treat framework, comparing outcomes across randomized groups regardless of engagement with the assigned content. Secondary and exploratory analyses will examine engagement patterns and heterogeneity of effects by baseline attitudes, knowledge, and demographic characteristics. The findings will provide evidence on the comparative effectiveness of different digital communication strategies for increasing HPV vaccination intention and uptake among parents in Nigeria and similar settings.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALChatbot counselingA brief motivational-interviewing-style chatbot dialogue adapted from WHO vaccination counseling guidance
BEHAVIORALMisinformation-resistance pre-bunking inoculationA short interactive game (approximately 3-5 minutes) designed to build resistance to HPV vaccine misinformation
BEHAVIORALShort edutainment5-6 brief edutainment videos (total viewing time approximately 10-15 minutes) providing HPV vaccine information tailored to the Nigerian context
BEHAVIORALStandard infographic controlExisting infographics on HPV vaccination from Nigeria's National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA)

Timeline

Start date
2026-04-01
Primary completion
2026-06-01
Completion
2026-06-01
First posted
2026-03-27
Last updated
2026-03-27

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07498075. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.