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What kind of 'a girls' thing'? Frictions and continuities in the framing and taming of the HPV vaccine in Finland.

This article focuses on two different ways of framing and taming the uncertainties of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in the context of the Finnish welfare state: the bio-medical rationale of population-level cancer reduction based on epidemiological assessments, and the meaning formation of Finnish vaccination-aged girls. Epidemiologists run analyses estimating the cost-effectiveness and public health benefit of vaccinations, while the adolescent girls face the burdensome choice of whether to undergo vaccination. The processes of framing the complexities and actively taming them are analysed utilising a cultural-sociological framework. Firstly, the taming work of the epidemiologists is examined by focusing on the creation of the vaccination campaign. The aetiological complexities between some HPV types and cervical cancer are tamed into a clear campaign message of vaccination as a scientifically proven protection against deadly cancer. Secondly, the girls' own ways of framing the complexities of the HPV vaccine and taming the decision whether to undergo vaccination or not are analysed based on their comments in an Internet discussion forum. Finally, the framings and tamings of both sites are discussed together, and some interesting continuities and disjunctions between the two are revealed.

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