Literature DB >> 18469430

Immunization levels among inner city children enrolled in subsidized childcare.

Quimby E McCaskill1, William Livingood, Paula M Crawford, Alison M Dekle, Tao Hou, David L Wood.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Measure immunization rates in subsidized child care and determine whether the population is representative of inner city preschool children.
METHODS: We identified 156 children, ages 0-60 months, in 14 inner-city child care centers enrolled in subsidized care and obtained demographic and immunization information. ZIP-code distribution of sample children was correlated with similarly aged children from the 2000 Census (family incomes .150% of poverty).
RESULTS: The overall subsidized child care population was geographically similar to all low-income children, ages 0-5, in Jacksonville (r.0.94). Only 73.3% were up-to-date at 3 months and 44.2% at 12 months of age (3 DTaP, 2 HIB, 2 IPV, 3 Hep B). DISCUSSION: Our findings support the contention that children in subsidized child care are geographically representative of low-income, inner city preschool children. This study suggests that children enrolled in subsidized child care are both potentially underserved and an accessible window into the inner-city preschool population.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18469430     DOI: 10.1353/hpu.0.0000

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved        ISSN: 1049-2089


  1 in total

1.  Inpatient growth and resource use in 28 children's hospitals: a longitudinal, multi-institutional study.

Authors:  Jay G Berry; Matt Hall; David E Hall; Dennis Z Kuo; Eyal Cohen; Rishi Agrawal; Kenneth D Mandl; Holly Clifton; John Neff
Journal:  JAMA Pediatr       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 16.193

  1 in total

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