Purpose of the study. The purpose of the project is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and cost effectiveness of providing influenza vaccine in schools to children in grades Kindergarten through 6th grade. Hypothesis 1: School based influenza vaccination (SIV) will increase the overall rate of influenza vaccination in school children. Hypothesis 2: Higher intensity parent notification about school based influenza vaccination does not increase immunization rates compared to low intensity. Hypothesis 3: School based vaccination from the perspective of mass vaccinators is cost neutral.
Background. The ACIP (American Committee on Immunization Practices) has now recommended influenza vaccination for all children 6 months to 18 years of age. While many school-aged children will be vaccinated in the medical home, the large number of children for whom the vaccine is now recommended exceeds the capacity of many primary care settings. Schools have been recommended as potential sites for influenza vaccination, yet little is known about the feasibility, implementation requirements, costs, or effectiveness of school-based influenza vaccination (SIV) programs. This project will implement and rigorously evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, billing and reimbursement components, costs, cost-effectiveness, and overall effectiveness of an SIV program that targets diverse populations and different intensity of interventions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
25,366
Interventions: Parents of children in Low Intensity Notification schools got less than 3 communications from schools describing influenza vaccine and the clinics, and consent forms sent home one.
Interventions: Parents in high intensity schools have 3 or more communications from schools about influenza illness, influenza vaccine, and school based clinics.
Monroe County Department of Public Health
Rochester, New York, United States
Seasonal influenza vaccine rates for children attending schools with and without school-based influenza vaccine delivery as reported in the New York State Immunization Information System (NYSIIS).
Number of children with at least one seasonal influenza vaccine given in school compared to number of children with influenza vaccine given elsewhere and number of children with no record of influenza vaccine.
Time frame: Year 1 Influenza vaccine delivery season: August 15 2009 to January 15, 2010
Seasonal influenza vaccine rates for children attending schools with and without school-based influenza vaccine delivery as reported in the New York State Immunization Information System (NYSIIS).
Number of children with at least one seasonal influenza vaccine given in school compared to number of children with influenza vaccine given elsewhere and number of children with no record of influenza vaccine.
Time frame: Year 2: Influenza vaccine delivery season: August 1, 2010 to January 15, 2011
Number of seasonal influenza vaccines received by children enrolled in schools with high vs. low vs. no parental notification.
Vaccine rates among children offered seasonal influenza vaccine in school whose parents got high intensity notification of the program vs those who got low intensity notification. Notification included educational materials, program description, consent forms, phone messages, and varied by type and frequency for schools with High and Low levels of parental notification.
Time frame: Year 1 Influenza vaccine delivery season: August 15, 2009 to January 15, 2010
Number of seasonal influenza vaccines received by children enrolled in schools with high vs low vs no parental notification.
Vaccine rates among children offered seasonal influenza vaccine in school whose parents got high intensity notification of the program vs those who got low intensity notification. Notification included educational materials, program description, consent forms, phone messages, and varied by type and frequency for schools with High and Low levels of parental notification.
Time frame: Year 2: Influenza vaccine delivery season: August 1, 2010 to January 15, 2011
Costs and incremental cost effectiveness of seasonal influenza vaccines delivered in schools compared to cost of influenza vaccines delivered in private practice.
Economic analysis of costs and revenues associated with school-based seasonal influenza vaccine delivered by a mass vaccinator. The project is based on a business model for purchasing/acquiring vaccine from vendors and vaccines for children, and recovering payment from insurance. Costs associated with vaccines administered in school are derived from this clinical trial, School Influenza Vaccine vs Standard of Care, and private practice data are from the literature.
Time frame: Time Frame: (FDAAA) Year 1 Influenza vaccine delivery season: August 15 2009 to January 15, 2010
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