OBJECTIVE: The goal was to describe variable costs to providers of delivering childhood immunizations. METHODS: We documented variable costs (costs that vary with the amount of services rendered), including time spent by pediatric staff members and physicians on immunization-related activities, as well as supply costs and medical waste disposal costs. Ten private pediatric practices in the Denver, Colorado, metropolitan area participated in the study. Among the 7 practices that provided us with payment data, 8 health plans were mentioned by > or = 2 practices. There were 37 different agreements between the health plans and practices for vaccine administration payments. RESULTS: The total documented variable cost per injection (excluding vaccine cost) averaged $11.51, calculated from the following categories: nursing time, $1.71; billing services, $2.67; nonroutine services, $1.64; registry use, $0.96; physician time, $4.05; supplies, $0.36; medical waste disposal, $0.12. Nonroutine activities primarily included performing vaccine inventory and ordering, providing vaccination records to requesters, and answering parent telephone questions about vaccinations. With the use of a simulation model to compensate for the small number of participating practices, the calculated total variable cost per injection was $11.83. When 2 vaccines were administered, we compared the sum of the 2 payments with the sum of the 2 variable costs ($23.02). More than one third of the payment agreements (13 of 37 agreements) paid the practices less than the combined variable costs for 2 immunizations. CONCLUSION: This study shows that the variable costs of vaccine administration exceeded reimbursement from some insurers and health plans.
OBJECTIVE: The goal was to describe variable costs to providers of delivering childhood immunizations. METHODS: We documented variable costs (costs that vary with the amount of services rendered), including time spent by pediatric staff members and physicians on immunization-related activities, as well as supply costs and medical waste disposal costs. Ten private pediatric practices in the Denver, Colorado, metropolitan area participated in the study. Among the 7 practices that provided us with payment data, 8 health plans were mentioned by > or = 2 practices. There were 37 different agreements between the health plans and practices for vaccine administration payments. RESULTS: The total documented variable cost per injection (excluding vaccine cost) averaged $11.51, calculated from the following categories: nursing time, $1.71; billing services, $2.67; nonroutine services, $1.64; registry use, $0.96; physician time, $4.05; supplies, $0.36; medical waste disposal, $0.12. Nonroutine activities primarily included performing vaccine inventory and ordering, providing vaccination records to requesters, and answering parent telephone questions about vaccinations. With the use of a simulation model to compensate for the small number of participating practices, the calculated total variable cost per injection was $11.83. When 2 vaccines were administered, we compared the sum of the 2 payments with the sum of the 2 variable costs ($23.02). More than one third of the payment agreements (13 of 37 agreements) paid the practices less than the combined variable costs for 2 immunizations. CONCLUSION: This study shows that the variable costs of vaccine administration exceeded reimbursement from some insurers and health plans.
Authors: Jay V DePasse; Kenneth J Smith; Jonathan M Raviotta; Eunha Shim; Mary Patricia Nowalk; Richard K Zimmerman; Shawn T Brown Journal: Am J Epidemiol Date: 2017-05-01 Impact factor: 4.897
Authors: Mandy A Allison; Sean T O'Leary; Megan C Lindley; Lori A Crane; Laura P Hurley; Brenda L Beaty; Michaela Brtnikova; Andrea Jimenez-Zambrano; Christine Babbel; Stephen Berman; Allison Kempe Journal: Acad Pediatr Date: 2017-06-07 Impact factor: 3.107
Authors: Jay V DePasse; Mary Patricia Nowalk; Kenneth J Smith; Jonathan M Raviotta; Eunha Shim; Richard K Zimmerman; Shawn T Brown Journal: Vaccine Date: 2017-06-09 Impact factor: 3.641
Authors: Doug Campos-Outcalt; Michelle Jeffcott-Pera; Pamela Carter-Smith; Bellinda K Schoof; Herbert F Young Journal: Ann Fam Med Date: 2010 Nov-Dec Impact factor: 5.166