PCD logo

Facilitators and Barriers to the Implementation of the HPV VACs (Vaccinate Adolescents Against Cancers) Program: A Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research Analysis

PEER REVIEWED

Figure.
Major themes of barriers and facilitators to implementing the HPV VACs (Vaccinate Adolescents Against Cancers) Program across domains of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), May–August 2016. This figure does not show all possible constructs, because the federally qualified health centers participating in the study did not report barriers or facilitators for every construct.

Major themes of barriers and facilitators to implementing the HPV VACs (Vaccinate Adolescents Against Cancers) Program across domains of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), May–August 2016. This figure does not show all possible constructs, because the federally qualified health centers participating in the study did not report barriers or facilitators for every construct.
CFIR Constructs Barrier Facilitator
Intervention characteristics
Design quality 3 0
Cost 5 0
Outer setting
Patient needs and resources: family buy-in 0 2
Patient needs and resources: patient misinformation/vaccine stigma 8 0
Patient needs and resources: cultural/language barriers 5 0
Patient needs and resources: low health literacy 4 0
External policies and incentives 9 0
Cosmopolitanism and peer pressure 0 2
Inner setting
Networks and communications 3 6
Implementation climate: compatibility 0 3
Implementation climate: relative priority 7 0
Readiness for implementation: leadership engagement 0 4
Readiness for implementation: available resources 9 5
Process
Planning 3 6
Engaging 5 5
Champions/opinion leaders 0 5
External change agents 0 2
Executing 8 7
Reflecting and evaluating 0 3
Individual characteristics
Knowledge and beliefs about the intervention 0 2

Return to Article

Top

Error processing SSI file

The opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors’ affiliated institutions.