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Increasing influenza immunization rates among healthcare providers in an ambulatory-based, University Healthcare Setting

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  • Increasing influenza immunization rates among healthcare providers in an ambulatory-based, University Healthcare Setting

    Int J Qual Health Care. 2019 Jan 9. doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzy247. [Epub ahead of print]
    Increasing influenza immunization rates among healthcare providers in an ambulatory-based, University Healthcare Setting.

    Frisina PG1, Ingraffia ST1, Brown TR1, Munene EN1, Pletcher JR1, Kolligian J1.
    Author information

    Abstract

    Objective:

    Despite its 'best practice' status as an intervention to combat healthcare-related influenza, many healthcare personnel (HCP) do not seek vaccinations themselves. The objective of this study was to achieve the Healthy People [HP] 2020's influenza vaccination goal of 90% among our HCP.
    Design:

    The study utilized the model for improvement, consisting of Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. Each influenza season served as a PDSA cycle until the HP 2020 vaccination goal was achieved. The quality improvement (QI) study was conducted over four influenza seasons (i.e. 2014-15; 2015-16; 2016-17 and 2017-18).
    Setting:

    The study's setting was an ambulatory-based, university health center within a suburban university located in central New Jersey.
    Participants:

    Adapting the National Vaccine Advisory Committee's definition of HCP, clinical and non-clinical staff members (n = 110) participated in the QI-study.
    Interventions:

    QI-interventions were centered on staff education/outreach, improved accessibility to influenza vaccines and frequent communication to staff over several PDSA cycles.
    Main Outcome & Results:

    The QI-interventions significantly increased our overall vaccination coverage on our influenza vaccination status survey from 70.2% (2011-14 influenza seasons; n = 102) to 84.9% (2014-15 influenza season; n = 93) in PDSA 1, and 91.1% (2015-16 influenza season; n = 90) in PDSA cycle 2 (χ2 = 309.53, P < 0.001). Vaccination rates remained above the 90% performance goal during our quality control/assurance measuring periods (i.e. the 2016-18 influenza seasons).
    Conclusions:

    This study demonstrates that influenza vaccination coverage can significantly improve among HCP through the application of concurrent and multifaceted QI-interventions.


    PMID: 30624657 DOI: 10.1093/intqhc/mzy247
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