| Literature DB >> 29088258 |
Elizabeth T Cafiero-Fonseca1,2, Andrew Stawasz1, Sydney T Johnson1,3, Reiko Sato4, David E Bloom1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pneumococcal disease causes substantial morbidity and mortality, including among adults. Adult pneumococcal vaccines help to prevent these burdens, but they are underused. Accounting for the full benefits of adult pneumococcal vaccination may promote more rational resource allocation decisions with respect to adult pneumococcal vaccines.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29088258 PMCID: PMC5663403 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
PICOS criteria for eligibility of studies.
| PICOS Category | Description |
|---|---|
| Population | Vaccinated adults age 50 or above, or adults 18 and older in “risk groups” (as defined by the authors of the paper) |
| Interventions | Vaccination with PCV13 or PPV23 |
| Comparator | Comparators as defined by the authors of the study, can include: |
| Outcomes | Health or economic benefits of adult pneumococcal vaccination, including: |
| Study Design | Experimental, observational, or model-based studies that capture health or economic benefits of adult pneumococcal vaccination |
Fig 1Flow diagram of study selection.
Summary of primary reasons for study exclusion after full text review.
| Primary reason for exclusion | Number (%) of studies |
|---|---|
| Does not capture a health or economic benefit of pneumococcal vaccination | 107 (47.98%) |
| Is a news article, comment, editorial, or review | 80 (35.87%) |
| Examines a target population that does not meet our criteria (e.g., children) | 29 (13.00%) |
| Is in a language other than English | 5 (2.24%) |
| Could not access article | 2 (0.90%) |
Current state of the literature regarding the full benefits of adult pneumococcal vaccination.
| Perspective | Benefit category | Brief description | Number (%) of studies that capture | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthcare cost savings | Averted direct medical costs | 79 studies (52.67%) | ||
| Narrow | Health gains | Inherent value of improved health | 149 studies (99.33%) | |
| Outcome-related productivity gains | Enhanced labor market output | 16 studies (10.67%) | ||
| Care-related productivity gains | Averted costs of formal or informal care | 2 studies (1.33%) | ||
| Voluntary contributions to family and community | Enhanced ability to volunteer and give care | 0 | ||
| Broad | Health-based community externalities | Herd effects or slowed pace of antimicrobial resistance | 1 study (0.67%) | |
| Prevention and amelioration of comorbidities | Value of experiencing fewer or milder comorbidities | 0 | ||
| Reduction in nosocomial infections | Averted hospital-acquired infection costs | 0 | ||
| Risk reduction gains | Value of peace of mind from vaccines | 0 | ||
| Promotion of social equity | Inherent value of narrowing health gaps | 0 | ||
*This represents the number (and percent) of included studies that capture the benefit category in question; categories are not mutually exclusive.