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Cost effectiveness analysis of Year 2 of an elementary school-located influenza vaccination program-Results from a randomized controlled trial.
- Source :
-
BMC Health Services Research . 11/16/2015, Vol. 15, p1-12. 12p. 2 Charts. - Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- <bold>Background: </bold>School-located vaccination against influenza (SLV-I) has the potential to improve current suboptimal influenza immunization coverage for U.S. school-aged children. However, little is known about SLV-I's cost-effectiveness. The objective of this study is to establish the cost-effectiveness of SLV-I based on a two-year community-based randomized controlled trial (Year 1: 2009-2010 vaccination season, an unusual H1N1 pandemic influenza season, and Year 2: 2010-2011, a more typical influenza season).<bold>Methods: </bold>We performed a cost-effectiveness analysis on a two-year randomized controlled trial of a Western New York SLV-I program. SLV-I clinics were offered in 21 intervention elementary schools (Year 1 n = 9,027; Year 2 n = 9,145 children) with standard-of-care (no SLV-I) in control schools (Year 1 n = 4,534 (10 schools); Year 2 n = 4,796 children (11 schools)). We estimated the cost-per-vaccinated child, by dividing the incremental cost of the intervention by the incremental effectiveness (i.e., the number of additionally vaccinated students in intervention schools compared to control schools).<bold>Results: </bold>In Years 1 and 2, respectively, the effectiveness measure (proportion of children vaccinated) was 11.2 and 12.0 percentage points higher in intervention (40.7 % and 40.4 %) than control schools. In year 2, the cost-per-vaccinated child excluding vaccine purchase ($59.88 in 2010 US $) consisted of three component costs: (A) the school costs ($8.25); (B) the project coordination costs ($32.33); and (C) the vendor costs excluding vaccine purchase ($16.68), summed through Monte Carlo simulation. Compared to Year 1, the two component costs (A) and (C) decreased, while the component cost (B) increased in Year 2. The cost-per-vaccinated child, excluding vaccine purchase, was $59.73 (Year 1) and $59.88 (Year 2, statistically indistinguishable from Year 1), higher than the published cost of providing influenza vaccination in medical practices ($39.54). However, taking indirect costs (e.g., averted parental costs to visit medical practices) into account, vaccination was less costly in SLV-I ($23.96 in Year 1, $24.07 in Year 2) than in medical practices.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Our two-year trial's findings reinforced the evidence to support SLV-I as a potentially favorable system to increase childhood influenza vaccination rates in a cost-efficient way. Increased efficiencies in SLV-I are needed for a sustainable and scalable SLV-I program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *INFLUENZA vaccines
*ELEMENTARY schools
*COST effectiveness
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*CONTROL groups
*MONTE Carlo method
*OVERHEAD costs
*IMMUNIZATION
*INFLUENZA prevention
*MEDICAL protocols
*INFLUENZA
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*PARENTS
*RESEARCH
*SCHOOL health services
*SEASONS
*STUDENTS
*SYSTEM analysis
*RESIDENTIAL patterns
*EVALUATION research
*INFLUENZA A virus, H1N1 subtype
*ECONOMICS
BUSINESS & economics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14726963
- Volume :
- 15
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- BMC Health Services Research
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 111007148
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-015-1169-5