Archived Teen Vaccination Coverage
2010 National Immunization Survey (NIS) – Teen
Key Points
CDC's 2010 national teen vaccination data shows that far too few U.S. girls are getting the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, a life-saving vaccine that can protect them against cervical cancer.
HPV vaccine coverage has not demonstrated the same strong and steady increases over time like the increases we have seen following the introduction of other vaccines.
There was overall improvement for the tetanus-diphtheria-pertussis (Tdap) vaccine, as well as for the meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MCV4).
Parents, healthcare providers and immunization partners all have a role in preventing HPV disease in girls
- Parents need to know their daughter's vaccination status
- If your daughter has not started the HPV series and is 11-12 years old, make an appointment to do so
- Healthcare providers should make strong recommendations and vaccinate every girl in your practice on time
- Immunization partners can make HPV vaccination a priority and help educate their community
NIS-Teen Survey Data Collected in 2010
Tdap
- Coverage for one dose of the Tdap vaccine increased by 13 percentage points, reaching about 69 percent (68.7% in 2010 vs. 55.9% in 2009)
- No differences by race/ethnicity
Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine
- Coverage for one dose of MCV4 (technically referred to as MenACWY in the MMWR article) increased by 9 percentage points, reaching about 63 percent (62.7% in 2010 vs. 53.6% in 2009)
- Coverage higher among Hispanics than among whites (66.1% vs. 61.2%)
HPV vaccine
- Coverage for one dose of HPV vaccine for girls increased by only 4.4 percentage points to about 49 percent (48.7% in 2010 vs 44.3% in 2009)
- For girls who received the recommended 3 doses of HPV vaccine, coverage increased 5 points to just 32 percent (32% in 2010 vs 26.7% in 2009)
- Of the girls who began the HPV vaccine series, 30 percent did not receive all three doses
- Completion of the 3 dose HPV series was lower among blacks and Hispanics than whites
- Coverage for 3 doses of HPV vaccine was lower for those living below poverty
- Poor and minority teens are less likely to receive all three recommended doses of the HPV vaccine
NIS-Teen Vaccination Coverage Data Tables
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