The effect of an information, motivation, and behavioral skills model intervention on young women’s intention to get an HPV vaccine
Citation
Taştekin Ouyaba, A., Özyürek, P., & Sevil, Ü. (2021). The effect of an information, motivation, and behavioral skills model intervention on young women’s intention to get an HPV vaccine. Psychology, Health & Medicine, 1-11.Abstract
This study aims to examine the effect of the information, motivation, and behavioral skills (IMB) model intervention on young
women’s intention to get the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccine.
An intervention study that has a pre-test, post-test design was
conducted with IMB and control groups. An intervention based
on the IMB model, focusing on developing motivation and proper
behavioral skills, was applied to the IMB group. A traditional
approach was applied to the control group. In this study, the
significant post-test differences within groups were information
(both groups improved significantly, p < 0.01), individual motivation (the control group decreased significantly, p < 0.01), behavioral
skills (both groups improved significantly, p < 0.01), selfmanagement behavior (the IMB group increased significantly,
p < 0.01), objective health outcome (the control group decreased
significantly, p < 0.01), and subjective health outcome (the IMB
group increased significantly, p < 0.0125). IMB-based interventions
can help young women acquire new sexual health behaviors to
prevent cervical cancer.