clovenhooves The Personal Is Political Women's Health News Study shows HPV vaccine protects vaccinated — and unvaccinated — women

News Study shows HPV vaccine protects vaccinated — and unvaccinated — women

News Study shows HPV vaccine protects vaccinated — and unvaccinated — women

 
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Oct 1 2025, 1:01 PM
#1
EurekaAlert, September 29 2025

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1099993

Quote:A large, long-term study led by an Albert Einstein College of Medicine researcher has found that the introduction of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in community settings is highly effective in protecting young women from infections caused by the cervical-cancer-causing virus—including women who didn’t even receive the vaccine. The study was published today in JAMA Pediatrics.

“There are two encouraging takeaways from our study,” said lead author Jessica Kahn, M.D., M.P.H., professor of pediatrics and the Dr. Ernest Baden Chair in Head and Neck Pathology at Einstein. “First, HPV vaccines work remarkably well in a real-world setting, even among women at high risk for HPV and who may not have received all vaccine doses. Second, we saw clear evidence of herd immunity, meaning when enough people are vaccinated, the vaccine indirectly protects unvaccinated people by reducing overall virus transmission. These results reinforce the potential of the HPV vaccine to prevent infection and, ultimately, eliminate cervical cancer globally.”

Kozlik's regular member account. 🍀🐐
Clover
Kozlik's regular account 🍀🐐
Oct 1 2025, 1:01 PM #1

EurekaAlert, September 29 2025

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1099993

Quote:A large, long-term study led by an Albert Einstein College of Medicine researcher has found that the introduction of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in community settings is highly effective in protecting young women from infections caused by the cervical-cancer-causing virus—including women who didn’t even receive the vaccine. The study was published today in JAMA Pediatrics.

“There are two encouraging takeaways from our study,” said lead author Jessica Kahn, M.D., M.P.H., professor of pediatrics and the Dr. Ernest Baden Chair in Head and Neck Pathology at Einstein. “First, HPV vaccines work remarkably well in a real-world setting, even among women at high risk for HPV and who may not have received all vaccine doses. Second, we saw clear evidence of herd immunity, meaning when enough people are vaccinated, the vaccine indirectly protects unvaccinated people by reducing overall virus transmission. These results reinforce the potential of the HPV vaccine to prevent infection and, ultimately, eliminate cervical cancer globally.”


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Oct 3 2025, 7:44 AM
#2
I wish the vaccine had been available when I was younger. I don't have HPV (that I know of, not sure I've ever been tested and I've never displayed symptoms). Considering how widespread cervical cancer was, and how much the vaccine seems to have dropped it, this is a vaccine that was needed a long time ago.

Some day, medical science will catch up to the fact that men are responsible for so much sexually transmitted disease, including bacterial vaginosis, yeast infections, and UTIs, because we only treat women because they're symptomatic. Men should be screened more frequently as part of health checks. Women should insist that if they're being treated for an infection, their male partners get tested and treated too. Otherwise he'll reinfect her and he may have been the one that gave it to her in the first place.
Elsacat
Oct 3 2025, 7:44 AM #2

I wish the vaccine had been available when I was younger. I don't have HPV (that I know of, not sure I've ever been tested and I've never displayed symptoms). Considering how widespread cervical cancer was, and how much the vaccine seems to have dropped it, this is a vaccine that was needed a long time ago.

Some day, medical science will catch up to the fact that men are responsible for so much sexually transmitted disease, including bacterial vaginosis, yeast infections, and UTIs, because we only treat women because they're symptomatic. Men should be screened more frequently as part of health checks. Women should insist that if they're being treated for an infection, their male partners get tested and treated too. Otherwise he'll reinfect her and he may have been the one that gave it to her in the first place.

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