SignalsAZ.com Prescott News Podcast - NAU Researcher Tests Text Messages to Boost HPV Vaccines
Episode Date: February 11, 2026Send us a text and chime in!Could a simple text message help prevent a cancer diagnosis? Naomi Lee hopes so. With 5,000 in funding from Merck & Co., Lee, an associate professor in the Department o...f Chemistry and Biochemistry at NAU, is developing a text message campaign that will raise awareness of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine among historically underserved Arizonans, including people from rural and Native American backgrounds who suffer from some of the highest rates of cancers caused by the virus. “I’ve seen a major disparity between Indigenous people and other groups when it comes to cancers overall, and especially HPV-associated cancers,” Lee said.... For the written story, read here >> https://www.signalsaz.com/articles/nau-researcher-tests-text-messages-to-boost-hpv-vaccines/Check out the CAST11.com Website at: https://CAST11.com Follow the CAST11 Podcast Network on Facebook at: https://Facebook.com/CAST11AZFollow Cast11 Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/cast11_podcast_network
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Could a simple text message help prevent a cancer diagnosis?
Naomi Lee hoped so.
With $435,000 in funding from Merck and Co. Lee, an associate professor in the Department of Chemistry
and Biochemistry at now, is developing a text message campaign that will raise awareness
of the human papillomavirus, HPV, vaccine among historically underserved erysonans,
including people from rural and Native American backgrounds who suffer from some of the highest rates
of cancers caused by the virus. I've seen a major disparity between indigenous people and other groups
when it comes to cancers overall, and especially HPV-associated cancers, Lee said.
We know younger individuals are getting the vaccine at higher rates, but older indigenous women
have the highest cervical cancer rates in the nation. A lot of my research centers on questions
about what's driving that. Are they getting vaccinated? If not, why aren't
over the next six months, Lee will work with the healthcare organization MedStar, University of
Arizona Cancer researcher Selena Valencia and a handful of now undergraduate students to develop
text messages and send them to a group of Arizonans who have no record of HPV vaccination.
MedStar's Phoenix branch has worked with indigenous communities on various research projects for more
than 30 years, and the rest of the research group is composed almost entirely of indigenous women.
Lee said the team's collective background and experience will prove pivotal to the project
project's recruitment success. Using Tango gift cards as enticement, they'll ask some participants
to fill out surveys to find out what they know about HPV and how they feel about vaccines,
one at the beginning of the campaign and another at the end. Participants also will have the
option to chat with researchers, sharing their questions and concerns about the virus and the
vaccine. Another group will only participate passively, Lee and her team will send that group
information about HPV and the vaccine without prompting them to take any action. In the second half
of 2026, the research group will analyze the outcome of the campaign using data from the survey.
We're doing pre- and post-campaign surveys to see if attitudes changed and if knowledge has increased,
Lee said. The surveys could also help us understand the barriers people face.
In my previous research, I found it's often about lack of access. It takes too long to drive to a
clinic. There are too many job or child care responsibilities to take time off, or they can't
commit to more than one appointment to complete the vaccine series. Learning about barriers
to access could be crucial in the fight against HPV-associated cancers, including oral cancer and
men, which is three to four times more common than cervical and other HPV associated cancers and
women. If access is the main reason why some rural communities aren't getting vaccinated,
that's actually promising news, because protection against HPV associated cancers is getting
easier, Lee said. The Department of Health and Human Services has new guidelines encouraging people
to self-test for HPV, and a new study is suggesting that just one dose of the HPV vaccine may be enough.
Lee said this is only a pilot study, with just 250 Arizonans in the Flagstaff, Phoenix and Tucson
area is taking part. But if the pilot proves successful, Lee hopes to reach more people via
text message in the future, again leveraging MedStars Arizona community connections to clear up
people's apprehensions about the HPV shots. Selina and I have been working in this field long enough
to know some of the misconceptions people have about HPV and cervical cancer, Lee said.
People are suspicious of some ingredients in the vaccine that they can't pronounce.
As a biochemist, I can tell them exactly what those ingredients are, what they do and why they're
important for the vaccine. In the future, Lee also hopes to quell health care providers'
misgivings about the vaccines and provide them with updated information, ensuring both patient
and provider are equipped with the information they need to stay healthy. We're building
partnerships with health facilities to do a separate study on health care workers and what they do
and don't know, Lee said. With the new recommendations coming out, providers might have questions about
what they mean, who they come from and how they can help patients who live in underserved areas.
Interested in participating in this study? For more information, visit the project website.
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