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School-located influenza vaccination (SLIV) increased seasonal influenza vaccination rates countywide and in both suburban and urban settings, a study found.
“Schools have a stake in influenza vaccination because immunization of schoolchildren can reduce absenteeism throughout the community. Nevertheless, only 6% of childhood influenza vaccinations occur at school. SLIV poses logistical challenges: obtaining parental consent, ordering and administering vaccine, and billing,” said Peter G. Szilagyi, MD, of Mattel Children’s Hospital, Los Angeles, and his associates.
From 2014 to 2015, 44 elementary schools were randomized in upstate New York in an organized cluster-randomized trial in which 19,776 children were eligible candidates. Seven percent of SLIV school students, 5% of suburban SLIV school students, and 9% of urban SLIV students were vaccinated at SLIV clinics. Children in SLIV schools had higher flu vaccination rates than did children in control schools countywide (54% vs. 47%, P less than .001) and in suburban (62% vs. 54%, P less than .001) and urban schools (44% vs. 39%; P less than .001).
SLIV did substitute for vaccination for urban settings serving more Vaccines for Children–covered students, but did not substitute for practice-based vaccination in the suburbs, where pediatricians often preorder influenza vaccine.
“SLIV, using Web-based consent, is a potential strategy to improve influenza vaccination coverage among large populations of children,” the researchers concluded.
Read the full story here: Pediatrics. 2016. doi: 10.1542/peds.2016-1746.
School-located influenza vaccination (SLIV) increased seasonal influenza vaccination rates countywide and in both suburban and urban settings, a study found.
“Schools have a stake in influenza vaccination because immunization of schoolchildren can reduce absenteeism throughout the community. Nevertheless, only 6% of childhood influenza vaccinations occur at school. SLIV poses logistical challenges: obtaining parental consent, ordering and administering vaccine, and billing,” said Peter G. Szilagyi, MD, of Mattel Children’s Hospital, Los Angeles, and his associates.
From 2014 to 2015, 44 elementary schools were randomized in upstate New York in an organized cluster-randomized trial in which 19,776 children were eligible candidates. Seven percent of SLIV school students, 5% of suburban SLIV school students, and 9% of urban SLIV students were vaccinated at SLIV clinics. Children in SLIV schools had higher flu vaccination rates than did children in control schools countywide (54% vs. 47%, P less than .001) and in suburban (62% vs. 54%, P less than .001) and urban schools (44% vs. 39%; P less than .001).
SLIV did substitute for vaccination for urban settings serving more Vaccines for Children–covered students, but did not substitute for practice-based vaccination in the suburbs, where pediatricians often preorder influenza vaccine.
“SLIV, using Web-based consent, is a potential strategy to improve influenza vaccination coverage among large populations of children,” the researchers concluded.
Read the full story here: Pediatrics. 2016. doi: 10.1542/peds.2016-1746.
School-located influenza vaccination (SLIV) increased seasonal influenza vaccination rates countywide and in both suburban and urban settings, a study found.
“Schools have a stake in influenza vaccination because immunization of schoolchildren can reduce absenteeism throughout the community. Nevertheless, only 6% of childhood influenza vaccinations occur at school. SLIV poses logistical challenges: obtaining parental consent, ordering and administering vaccine, and billing,” said Peter G. Szilagyi, MD, of Mattel Children’s Hospital, Los Angeles, and his associates.
From 2014 to 2015, 44 elementary schools were randomized in upstate New York in an organized cluster-randomized trial in which 19,776 children were eligible candidates. Seven percent of SLIV school students, 5% of suburban SLIV school students, and 9% of urban SLIV students were vaccinated at SLIV clinics. Children in SLIV schools had higher flu vaccination rates than did children in control schools countywide (54% vs. 47%, P less than .001) and in suburban (62% vs. 54%, P less than .001) and urban schools (44% vs. 39%; P less than .001).
SLIV did substitute for vaccination for urban settings serving more Vaccines for Children–covered students, but did not substitute for practice-based vaccination in the suburbs, where pediatricians often preorder influenza vaccine.
“SLIV, using Web-based consent, is a potential strategy to improve influenza vaccination coverage among large populations of children,” the researchers concluded.
Read the full story here: Pediatrics. 2016. doi: 10.1542/peds.2016-1746.
FROM PEDIATRICS