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When Myths Meet Medicine: Understanding the Science Behind HPV Vaccination

Dr Biney

Dr Biney

1. Myths and Misconceptions

Across Ghana and much of Africa, vaccination is often met with suspicion. Some believe vaccines are tools for the West to reduce or control Africa’s population. Others fear vaccines weaken the “natural strength” of Black people.

A common belief is that vaccines secretly reduce fertility or introduce chemicals that limit reproduction. Some claim vaccines are linked to hidden diseases, microchips, or toxins, while others argue that traditional herbs and diets are sufficient, making vaccines unnecessary.

In certain communities, parents worry vaccines may encourage early sexual activity or immoral behaviour. Some even think childhood vaccination interferes with religious or cultural rites of passage. Others are concerned about side effects they’ve heard through social media or community hearsay, such as long-term illness or sudden deaths — despite no scientific evidence supporting these claims.

Some believe Black skin and African genetics are “stronger” and do not need vaccines, or that vaccines are unnecessary because African children are naturally resilient. Others think giving vaccines to young girls encourages promiscuity.

These myths, while widespread, conflict with science. Vaccines strengthen the immune system, prevent deadly diseases, and save millions of lives. They do not reduce fertility, alter genes, or control populations.

2. HPV and the Vaccine

Human Papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common viral infection of the reproductive system. Types 16 and 18 cause about 70 per cent of cervical cancers, which kill over 2,000 Ghanaian women each year.

The HPV vaccine prevents infection by preparing the immune system to fight the virus before exposure. Vaccination acts like a safety shield, protecting children long before the virus can cause disease.

3. Africa’s Evidence

African countries show that HPV vaccination works.
According to PUBMED:

These successes show that Africa can prevent cervical cancer effectively when vaccination programmes are well organised.

4. Global Proof: Lessons from the Western World

The HPV vaccine’s success is not limited to Africa.

This proves that the vaccine works globally — and Africa is no exception.

5. Why Ghana Targets Girls Aged 9–16

Ghana vaccinates only girls aged 9–16 for biological and practical reasons:

Vaccinating girls ensures they are protected before sexual debut — critical for preventing cervical cancer later in life.

6. Addressing Fears

Some parents worry early vaccination encourages sexual activity. Research shows it does not. The vaccine is purely preventive — like giving a mosquito net before malaria season.

Building trust requires open conversations, respectful listening, and education by health workers, teachers, traditional leaders, and parents. Awareness campaigns that explain how the vaccine protects against cancer, not sexual behaviour, help reduce fear and improve uptake.

7. The Bigger Picture

Cervical cancer treatment is expensive and often inaccessible, especially in rural areas. HPV vaccination is cost-effective, prevents multiple HPV-related cancers, and protects girls for life.

Early vaccination saves lives, reduces healthcare costs, and builds healthier generations.

8. Conclusion

Vaccination should never be forced, but parents deserve informed choices. The HPV vaccine is proven, African-tested, and globally trusted.

By choosing vaccination today, Ghanaian parents protect their daughters and contribute to a future where cervical cancer becomes history — one child, one vaccine, and one healthy generation at a time.


The writer is a Medical Doctor, Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR) Advocate

By Dr. Michael Baah Biney,
Medical Doctor, SRHR Advocate, and Global Health Enthusiast

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