A 'taboo': Doctor addresses parents concerns around HPVpublished at 11:28 BST
Tara Mewawalla
Live reporter
Image source, Alexandra LawrenceAlexandra Lawrence is chair of the Gynaecological Expert Reference Group North East London Cancer Alliance (NELCA)
As a consultant gynaecological oncologist at the Royal London Hospital, Alexandra Lawrence speaks to parents who are sometimes “hesitant” to get their children vaccinated.
She says this is because they believe the HPV vaccine will promote sexual activity in young women, but not getting children vaccinated “makes them less protected” and “might undermine their future health".
Lawrence says the HPV vaccine also protects men and boys from certain cancers, protects any future partners, and is particularly useful for men who have sex with men.
“The younger you have the vaccination the more likely you are to have enduring immunity," Lawrence explains. "Ideally you’d have it before you have sex.”
Lawrence adds that for some people, having HPV has a “big taboo”.
“It’s a sexually acquired infection but pretty much everybody who ever has sex gets exposed to HPV. It’s just luck of the draw if you get high-risk HPV or low-risk”. However, she says, “people are becoming much more accepting of it”.






