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HPV Vaccination Status and Sexual Behavior among Young Sexually-active Women in the United States: Evidence from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007-2014

Tuesday, June 25, 2019
Exhibit Hall C (Marriott Wardman Park Hotel)

Presenter: Andrew Leidner


Concern has been expressed that human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programs might promote risky sexual behavior through mechanisms such as risk compensation, behavioral disinhibition, or perceived endorsement of sexual activity. This study assesses whether HPV vaccination status is associated with any differences in selected sexual behaviors among young sexually-active women in the United States. Our dataset includes young, adult female respondents from questionnaire data collected in the National Center for Health Statistics’ National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 2007 to 2014. The empirical approach implements a doubly-robust estimation procedure, based on inverse-probability of treatment-weighting. For robustness, we implement several specifications for the propensity model and the outcomes model. We find no consistent association between HPV vaccination and condom usage or frequency of sex. Specifically, we find no evidence that HPV vaccination is associated with condom usage or with whether a person had sex more than 52 or more than 104 times per year. We find inconsistent evidence that HPV vaccination is associated with a person having sex more than 12 times per year. As in previous research, HPV vaccination does not appear to have a substantive effect on sexual behavior among young sexually-active women in the United States.