Literature DB >> 12580691

Time spent by primary care practices on pediatric influenza vaccination visits: implications for universal influenza vaccination.

Peter G Szilagyi1, Marika K Iwane, Sharon E Humiston, Stanley Schaffer, Thomas McInerny, Laura Shone, Jacqueline Jennings, Michael L Washington, Ben Schwartz.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To measure the time currently spent by primary care practice personnel, and the examination room occupancy time for childhood influenza vaccination visits, to assess the practicality of annual influenza vaccination of all preschool children.
SETTING: Seven primary care practices serving one fourth of the children living in Rochester, NY. PATIENTS: Ninety-two children seen for influenza vaccination visits in the 2000-2001 vaccination season.
METHODS: Using a standardized protocol, practice staff measured the time spent on check-in, nurse or physician examination, and the actual influenza vaccination process. Waiting and "hands-on" times were determined, as well as total visit and room occupancy times. Nonparametric tests and multivariable models were used to analyze the time spent for components of the visits and to compare time spent by different age groups and practice types (suburban or urban).
RESULTS: The median duration of the influenza vaccination visit was 14 minutes (25th to 75th percentiles range, 9-25 minutes) across the 7 practices, with visits to urban practices being longer (22 minutes) than visits to suburban practices (9 minutes). Eighty percent of patient time involved waiting, primarily in examination rooms. The major components of influenza vaccination visits included waiting room time (4 minutes in suburban practices vs 8 minutes in urban practices; P<.01), and time in the examination room (5 minutes vs 14 minutes, respectively; P<.001), during which only 1 to 2 minutes (for both suburban and urban practices) were for hands-on vaccinations. Only 5% of visits were examined by a physician or nurse practitioner. Visit times did not vary by age.
CONCLUSIONS: Although the personnel time for influenza vaccination visits was short, there was substantial patient waiting and long occupancy of examination rooms. If universal influenza vaccination is to be efficiently managed in primary care practices, it may be necessary to implement "vaccination clinics" or sessions in which large numbers of children are scheduled for influenza vaccinations at times when adequate rooms and dedicated nursing staff are available.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12580691     DOI: 10.1001/archpedi.157.2.191

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med        ISSN: 1072-4710


  10 in total

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2.  Assessment of parental report for 2009-2010 seasonal and monovalent H1N1 influenza vaccines among children in the emergency department or hospital.

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3.  School-Based Influenza Vaccination: Health and Economic Impact of Maine's 2009 Influenza Vaccination Program.

Authors:  Ricardo Basurto-Dávila; Martin I Meltzer; Dora A Mills; Garrett R Beeler Asay; Bo-Hyun Cho; Samuel B Graitcer; Nancy L Dube; Mark G Thompson; Suchita A Patel; Samuel K Peasah; Jill M Ferdinands; Paul Gargiullo; Mark Messonnier; David K Shay
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4.  Practice and child characteristics associated with influenza vaccine uptake in young children.

Authors:  Katherine A Poehling; Gerry Fairbrother; Yuwei Zhu; Stephanie Donauer; Sandra Ambrose; Kathryn M Edwards; Mary Allen Staat; Mila M Prill; Lyn Finelli; Norma J Allred; Barbara Bardenheier; Peter G Szilagyi
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5.  The impact of missed opportunities on seasonal influenza vaccination coverage for healthy young children.

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6.  Preparing for an influenza pandemic: model of an immunization clinic in an urban family practice.

Authors:  Nicole Bourgeois; Carolyn Franke; Shirlee A O'Connor; Holly Shaw; Susan Hum; Sheila Dunn
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7.  Cost of universal influenza vaccination of children in pediatric practices.

Authors:  Byung-Kwang Yoo; Peter G Szilagyi; Stanley J Schaffer; Sharon G Humiston; Cynthia M Rand; Christina S Albertin; Phyllis Vincelli; Aaron K Blumkin; Laura P Shone; Margaret S Coleman
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 7.124

8.  Hidden efficiencies: making completion of the pediatric vaccine schedule more efficient for physicians.

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Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2015-01       Impact factor: 1.889

9.  Time and labour costs of preventive health care, including vaccinations, in Finnish child health clinics.

Authors:  Heta Nieminen; Tuovi Hakulinen; Taneli Puumalainen; Päivi Sirén; Arto A Palmu
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Review 10.  Challenges and Opportunities of Mass Vaccination Centers in COVID-19 Times: A Rapid Review of Literature.

Authors:  Vincenza Gianfredi; Flavia Pennisi; Alessandra Lume; Giovanni Emanuele Ricciardi; Massimo Minerva; Matteo Riccò; Anna Odone; Carlo Signorelli
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  10 in total

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