학술논문

Cost effectiveness of school-located influenza vaccination programs for elementary and secondary school children
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Health Services Research. 19(1)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Nursing
Public Health
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Immunization
Pediatric
Vaccine Related
Behavioral and Social Science
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Health Services
Prevention
Comparative Effectiveness Research
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Cost Effectiveness Research
Prevention of disease and conditions
and promotion of well-being
3.4 Vaccines
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Child
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Humans
Immunization Programs
Influenza Vaccines
Influenza
Human
New York
Program Evaluation
School Health Services
Schools
School-located vaccination program
Influenza vaccination
Adolescents
School-age children
Web-based consent form system
Cost-effectiveness analysis
Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio
Library and Information Studies
Public Health and Health Services
Health Policy & Services
Health services and systems
Public health
Language
Abstract
BackgroundStudies have noted variations in the cost-effectiveness of school-located influenza vaccination (SLIV), but little is known about how SLIV's cost-effectiveness may vary by targeted age group (e.g., elementary or secondary school students), or vaccine consent process (paper-based or web-based). Further, SLIV's cost-effectiveness may be impacted by its spillover effect on practice-based vaccination; prior studies have not addressed this issue.MethodsWe performed a cost-effectiveness analysis on two SLIV programs in upstate New York in 2015-2016: (a) elementary school SLIV using a stepped wedge design with schools as clusters (24 suburban and 18 urban schools) and (b) secondary school SLIV using a cluster randomized trial (16 suburban and 4 urban schools). The cost-per-additionally-vaccinated child (i.e., incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER)) was estimated by dividing the incremental SLIV intervention cost by the incremental effectiveness (i.e., the additional number of vaccinated students in intervention schools compared to control schools). We performed deterministic analyses, one-way sensitivity analyses, and probabilistic analyses.ResultsThe overall effectiveness measure (proportion of children vaccinated) was 5.7 and 5.5 percentage points higher, respectively, in intervention elementary (52.8%) and secondary schools (48.2%) than grade-matched control schools. SLIV programs vaccinated a small proportion of children in intervention elementary (5.2%) and secondary schools (2.5%). In elementary and secondary schools, the ICER excluding vaccine purchase was $85.71 and $86.51 per-additionally-vaccinated-child, respectively. When additionally accounting for observed spillover impact on practice-based vaccination, the ICER decreased to $80.53 in elementary schools -- decreasing substantially in secondary schools. (to $53.40). These estimates were higher than the published practice-based vaccination cost (median = $25.50, mean = $45.48). Also, these estimates were higher than our 2009-2011 urban SLIV program mean costs ($65) due to additional costs for use of a new web-based consent system ($12.97 per-additionally-vaccinated-child) and higher project coordination costs in 2015-2016. One-way sensitivity analyses showed that ICER estimates were most sensitive to the SLIV effectiveness.ConclusionsSLIV raises vaccination rates and may increase practice-based vaccination in primary care practices. While these SLIV programs are effective, to be as cost-effective as practice-based vaccination our SLIV programs would need to vaccinate more students and/or lower the costs for consent systems and project coordination.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02227186 (August 25, 2014), updated NCT03137667 (May 2, 2017).