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Corrected human papillomavirus vaccination rates for each birth fiscal year in Japan.

Satoshi NakagawaYutaka UedaAsami YagiSayaka IkedaKosuke HiramatsuTadashi Kimura
Published in: Cancer science (2020)
In Japan, the serious adverse events after human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination were widely reported in the media. The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan (MHLW) announced the suspension of the governmental recommendation of HPV vaccine in 2013, and the inoculation rate has since sharply declined. The estimated inoculation rate for each birth fiscal year (FY) announced by the MHLW and the actual numbers for each birth FY surveyed by local governments were very different. In particular, the cumulative vaccination rate of girls born in FY2000 was regarded to be as high as 42.9% by the Council of the MHLW. However, this estimation included a confusion. When the suspension of the governmental recommendation was announced in FY2013, the girls born in FY2000 turned 13 years old, the targeted starting age of the HPV vaccination. The vaccination rate of this generation is considered to be quite low. The numbers were recalculated in this study. This study revealed that the real vaccination rate is only 14.3%. Female individuals born in or after FY2000 have been confirmed to be exposed to the same cervical cancer risk as before the HPV vaccine was introduced in Japan.
Keyphrases
  • gestational age
  • high grade
  • healthcare
  • low birth weight
  • mental health
  • risk assessment
  • pregnant women
  • cancer therapy
  • cervical cancer screening
  • pregnancy outcomes