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Tempest in a teapot: A systematic review of HPV vaccination and risk compensation research

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TLDR
None of the studies of sexual behaviors and/or biological outcomes found evidence of riskier behaviors or higher rates of STIs after HPV vaccination, which should be reassuring to parents and health care providers.
Abstract
There has been some concern among parents and in the media that vaccinating children against human papillomavirus could be seen as giving children permission to engage in risky sexual behaviors (also known as sexual disinhibition). Several studies have found this concern to be unfounded but there have been no attempts to synthesize the relevant studies in order to assess if there is evidence of sexual disinhibition. The aim of this study was to synthesize recent literature examining sexual behaviors and biological outcomes (e.g., sexually transmitted infections) post-HPV vaccination. We reviewed literature from January 1, 2008-June 30, 2015 using PubMed, CINAHL, and Embase with the following search terms: [(sex behavior OR sex behavior OR sexual) AND (human papillomavirus OR HPV) AND (vaccines OR vaccine OR vaccination)] followed by a cited reference search. We included studies that examined biological outcomes and reported behaviors post-vaccination in both males and females. Studies were reviewed by title and abstract and relevant studies were examined as full-text articles. We identified 2,503 articles and 20 were eventually included in the review. None of the studies of sexual behaviors and/or biological outcomes found evidence of riskier behaviors or higher rates of STIs after HPV vaccination. Instead, the studies found that vaccinated compared to unvaccinated individuals were less likely to report vaginal intercourse without a condom (OR = 0.5; 95%CI = 0.4-0.6) and non-use of contraception (OR = 0.27; 95%CI = 0.15-0.48) and unvaccinated participants had higher rates of Chlamydia (OR = 2.3; 95%CI = 1.06-5.00). These results should be reassuring to parents and health care providers.

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Citations
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Impact of community masking on COVID-19: A cluster-randomized trial in Bangladesh

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The feminization of HPV: How science, politics, economics and gender norms shaped U.S. HPV vaccine implementation.

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Face coverings for the public: Laying straw men to rest.

TL;DR: This article responds to one by Graham Martin and colleagues, who offered a critique of my previous publications on face coverings for the lay public in the Covid‐19 pandemic, and sets out some key findings from basic science, epidemiology, mathematical modelling, case studies, and natural experiments as the backdrop for a rebuttal of their narrowly framed objections.

The feminization of HPV: How science, politics, economics and gender norms shaped U.S. HPV vaccine implementation

TL;DR: This critical review traces the evolution of the intersection of science, politics, economics and gender norms during the original HPV vaccine approval, marketing era, and implementation and proposes a multilevel approach to normalizing HPV vaccines as an important aspect of overall health for both genders.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Risk perception and sexual behavior in HPV-vaccinated and unvaccinated young Colombian women

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared sexual behaviors and risk perception between young women vaccinated for HPV and unvaccinated Colombian women, and found no association between vaccination and perceived risk of sexually transmitted infections in any model.
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Prevention of sexually transmitted infections among girls and young women in relation to their HPV vaccination status

TL;DR: Knowledge about cervical cancer prevention was better among those who had been vaccinated against HPV than amongThose who had not, and behaviour relevant to STI prevention seemed appropriate whatever the respondents' vaccination status.
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Parents' and sons' beliefs in sexual disinhibition after human papillomavirus vaccination.

TL;DR: Most parents and sons did not believe that HPV vaccination leads to sexual disinhibition among boys, and understanding the characteristics of parents and Sons who hold these beliefs may help inform efforts to increase HPV vaccine uptake among boys.
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Comparing risk behaviours of human papillomavirus-vaccinated and non-vaccinated women

TL;DR: In the UK, where vaccine coverage is high, failure to initiate HPV vaccination amongst GUM attendees is a marker of high-risk behaviours and HPV vaccination status should be ascertained as part of an individual's clinical history by sexual health services to ensure advice and counselling is provided to those at greatest risk of HPV-associated disease.
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No difference in sexual behavior of adolescent girls following Human Papilloma Virus vaccination: a case study two districts in Uganda; Nakasongola and Luwero

TL;DR: Compared to non vaccinated adolescent girls in two neighboring districts in Uganda, there was no significant difference in sexual behavior between vaccinated and non vaccinated girls and HPV vaccination was not significantly associated with being sexually active.
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