Human papilloma virus vaccination and cervical cancer screening coverage in managed care plans — United States, 2018
Menée aux Etats-Unis à l'aide de données 2018 de performance en santé, cette étude analyse les taux de vaccination contre le papillomavirus humain et de dépistage du cancer du col de l'utérus dans les plans de soins gérés au niveau national et régional
Résumé en anglais
Human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccination for adolescents aged 11–12 years and cervical cancer screening for women aged 21–65 years are recommended to help prevent cervical cancer. The purpose of this study was to describe 2018 National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) data for the United States on HPV vaccination and cervical cancer screening from 275 commercial preferred provider organizations (PPOs), 219 commercial health maintenance organizations (HMOs), and 204 Medicaid HMOs. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and NCQA analyzed the data in 2021. The HEDIS measure for HPV vaccination was the percentage of male and female adolescents aged 13 years who completed HPV immunization (2– or 3–dose series) on or before their 13th birthday. The measure for cervical cancer screening was the percentage of women screened either with cervical cytology within the last 3 years for women aged 21–64 years or with cervical cytology/HPV co-testing within the last 5 years for women aged 30–64 years. Nationally, the mean rate for HPV vaccination in 2018 was 37.8% in Medicaid HMOs, 30.3% in commercial HMOs, and 24.9% in PPOs. The mean rate for cervical cancer screening was 75.9% in commercial HMOs, 72.6% in commercial PPOs, and 60.3% among Medicaid HMOs. Medicaid HMOs reported higher HPV vaccination rates but lower cervical cancer screening rates than commercial plans. These differences raise questions about explanatory factors and how to improve prevention performance by plan category.