HPV Vaccinations Perrysburg OH

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on HPV Vaccinations. You will find informative articles about HPV Vaccinations, including "HPV Vaccine for Men: Necessary or Not?". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Perrysburg, OH that can help answer your questions about HPV Vaccinations.

Eric Andrew Schaub, MD
419-381-3939
26919 Mingo Dr
Perrysburg, OH
Donato Joseph Borrillo, MD
216-574-4365
2150 W Central Ave
Toledo, OH
Richard Lee Worthington, MD
2213 Cherry St
Toledo, OH
Roger Alan Miller, MD
419-843-9952
6845 Ridgewood Trl
Toledo, OH
Thomas Eugene Lieser, MD
419-697-6850
3028 Navarre Ave
Oregon, OH
Harvey Andrew Popovich, MD
419-251-2475
PO Box 206
Waterville, OH
Charles Dennis Bendixen, MD
402-465-0010
2051 W Central Ave
Toledo, OH
Sue Major Parkins, MD
419-251-4690
2213 Cherry St
Toledo, OH
Lawrence Kale, MD
419-865-4448
2702 Navarre Ave
Oregon, OH
James Dominic Brue, MD
419-696-7493
Occup Health Servs 2600 Navarre Avenue
Oregon, OH
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HPV Vaccine for Men: Necessary or Not?

Although the results of a new, four year international study of over 4,000 healthy male participants make a compelling case for giving the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine to men, health officials and other experts are still divided about making it a requirement.

There are more than 40 types of HPV, a sexually transmitted disease (STD), which can be passed on through vaginal, anal, and oral sex and can infect the mouth, throat, and genital areas of men. In addition to genital warts, HPV has been linked to cervical, vaginal, vulvar, oral, penile, head, neck, and anal cancers.

The study, led by the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), found that the HPV vaccine can prevent 90 percent of genital warts in men when offered before exposure to the four HPV strains covered by the vaccine.

Genital HPV is fairly common. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says half of all sexually active people in the United States will contract HPV at some time in their lives but a large percentage never develop any symptoms or health problems as a result.

Genital warts can appear as raised or flat growths on the penis, testicles, groin, thighs, or anus. Though they usually aren't painful and are not life threatening, Joel Palesfesky, MD, a UCSF professor of medicine who co-led the research said in a press release that genital warts are often associated with depression, social stigma, and loss of self-esteem.

In 2009, data from this study informed the Food and Drug Administrations decision to approve the vaccine for boys and men ages 9 though 26 to prevent warts. Results from a sub-study led the FDA to expand approval in 2010 to prevent anal cancer. However the CDC has yet to recommend it as a routine immunization. (In 2006, the HPV vaccine was approved for girls to prevent cervical cancer.)

The Case for the HPV Vaccine in Men

  1. Vaccinating males early-before exposure to the HPV strains in the immunization-will prevent most cases of external genital warts.
  2. Vaccinating boys and men also protects women. Palefsky said girls have a poor record of receiving the full round of Gardasil, the HPV vaccine for women. Just 30 to 40 percent of teenage girls in the U.S. have received even one of the three recommended doses of the vaccine.
  3. Prevention is vital because HPV can spread easily and has the potential to cause illness.
  4. Studies have found that oral and anal cancers are on the rise among men, and researchers believe HPV is partially to blame.
  5. There are no screening tests for HPV-related cancers in men as there are for women.
  6. Young men who have sex with men might benefit more from the vaccine since they are more likely to develop HPV-related disease than heterosexual men.
  7. Condoms may lower your chances of passing HPV to a partner or developing HPV-related diseases, but HPV can still infect areas that are not covered by a condom.

The Case Against the HPV Vaccine

  1. Genital...

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