Need to contact us?

Phone: (919) 962-2091
Fax: (919) 962-2279
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Our office is located at 210 Pittsboro Street, directly across the street from the entrance to the Carolina Inn.

nicklby

TOP STORY

‘Nicholas Nickleby’ takes the stage at PlayMakers

PlayMakers Repertory Company will stage the biggest production in its history with “The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby” Nov. 11-Dec. 20. The professional theater-in-residence at UNC will present the stage version of Charles Dickens’ masterpiece in two parts, running in rotating repertory.  PlayMakers’ producing artistic director Joseph Haj, who will co-direct the play, said that Dickens’ novel will be brought to life with all the colorful characters, fantastic twists of fate, sly humor and rich, interwoven tapestry of his immortal tale. read more
25 actors, 150 roles: Nicholas Nickleby
Watch an interview with Joe Haj
oberlander  

Jonathan Oberlander, Ph.D., a specialist in health care politics and policy and in issues in American health care reform, can discuss the health care proposals of the president. find more experts

Home
UNC study: HPV vaccine hurts less than expected E-mail
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Injections of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine appear to be no more painful than other shots that prevent disease, according to a new study by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The finding follows anecdotal accounts and news stories that have emphasized the potential side effects of the HPV vaccine, including reports of painful injections. That has prompted concern among public health professionals that vaccine pain may deter parents and young women from getting the vaccine or completing the recommended three-dose series.

Researchers at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health and UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center found that most parents of adolescent girls reported their daughters experienced similar or less pain from HPV vaccine shots than from tetanus boosters and meningococcal vaccinations. The study, “How much will it hurt? HPV vaccine side effects and influence on completion of the three-dose regimen,” appears online in the journal Vaccine.

The human papillomavirus vaccine can potentially protect young women from the strains of the virus that cause the majority of cervical cancers, several other deadly cancers and genital warts. Yet only about 37 percent of adolescent girls in the United States who are eligible for the vaccine have initiated the three-dose vaccination series.

“Some stories about HPV vaccine side effects and pain have been downright scary. However, most parents in our study reported their daughters experienced the same amount of pain or even less pain from the HPV vaccine compared to these other vaccines,” said UNC postdoctoral fellow Paul L. Reiter, Ph.D., corresponding author of the study.

The team also found that pain from HPV vaccination was not a reason behind failure to complete the vaccine regimen. Daughters who experienced pain from HPV vaccination were just as likely to complete all three doses on time as those who did not experience pain.

Noel T. Brewer, Ph.D., senior investigator on the study, UNC Lineberger member and assistant professor of health behavior and health education in the public health school, said the researchers hoped their findings could increase young women’s initiation and completion of the vaccine series by dispelling the myth that it is unusually painful.

“It’s important for parents and health care providers to be aware of these findings,” he said. “Doctors and parents can now make better informed decisions about giving adolescent girls the HPV vaccine.” He said the take home message from the study findings is, “Getting the HPV vaccine hurts less than you think.”

Along with Brewer and Reiter, other study co-authors were Sami Gottlieb, M.D., with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Annie-Laurie McRee, a doctoral student in maternal and child health in the public health school; and Jennifer Smith, Ph.D, research associate professor of epidemiology in the public health school and a UNC Lineberger member.

Funding for the research came from the CDC, the American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute.

Journal note: This article has been accepted for publication in Vaccine, In press, Reiter PL, Brewer NT, Gottlieb SL, McRee AL, Smith JS, How much will it hurt? HPV vaccine side effects and influence on completion of the three-dose regimen, Copyright Elsevier (2009).


UNC Lineberger contact:
Ellen de Graffenreid, (919) 962-3405, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health contact:  Ramona DuBose, (919) 966-7467, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
News Services contact: Patric Lane, (919) 962-8596, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
 

CAROLINA IN THE NEWS

Swimmers, poets among 2010 Rhodes Scholars from US
The Associated Press

When Henry Spelman found out he'd won a Rhodes Scholarship, his first call was to his girlfriend. To share the good news, of course, but also to see whether she was a winner as well. The couple, both seniors at the University of North Carolina, had done their final scholarship interviews apart - he in Philadelphia, she in Houston. Spelman heard the results first. When he called with his good news, "the stakes just went way up," said his girlfriend, Libby Longino, who had to wait 45 minutes before finding out that she, too, had nabbed one of the world's most prestigious scholarships.