| Literature DB >> 29194019 |
Elizabeth M La1, Laurel Trantham1, Samantha K Kurosky1, Dawn Odom2, Emmanuel Aris3, Cosmina Hogea4.
Abstract
Despite longstanding recommendations for routine vaccination against influenza; pneumococcal; tetanus, diphtheria, acellular pertussis (Tdap); and herpes zoster (HZ) among the United States general adult population, vaccine uptake remains low. Understanding factors that influence adult vaccination and coverage variability beyond the national level are important steps toward developing targeted strategies for increasing vaccination coverage. A retrospective analysis was conducted using data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (2011-2014). Multivariable logistic regression modeling was employed to identify individual factors associated with vaccination (socio-demographics, health status, healthcare utilization, state of residence) and generate adjusted vaccination coverage and compliance estimates nationally and by state. Results indicated that multiple characteristics were consistently associated with a higher likelihood of vaccination across all four vaccines, including female sex, increased educational attainment, and annual household income. Model-adjusted vaccination coverage estimates varied widely by state, with inter-state variability for the most recent year of data as follows: influenza (aged ≥18 years) 30.2-49.5%; pneumococcal (aged ≥65 years) 64.0-74.7%; Tdap (aged ≥18 years) 18.7-46.6%; and HZ (aged ≥60 years) 21.3-42.9%. Model-adjusted compliance with age-appropriate recommendations across vaccines was low and also varied by state: influenza+Tdap (aged 18-59 years) 7.9-24.7%; influenza+Tdap+HZ (aged 60-64 years) 4.1-14.4%; and influenza+Tdap+HZ+pneumococcal (aged ≥65 years) 3.0-18.3%. In summary, after adjusting for individual characteristics associated with vaccination, substantial heterogeneity across states remained, suggesting that other local factors (e.g. state policies) may be impacting adult vaccines uptake. Further research is needed to understand such factors, focusing on differences between states with high versus low vaccination coverage.Entities:
Keywords: Influenza; Tdap; United States; adult; compliance; coverage; herpes zoster; pneumococcal; state-level; vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29194019 PMCID: PMC5806688 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2017.1403697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452
Figure 6.Effect of state of residence on likelihood of compliance with age-appropriate recommended influenza and Tdap vaccinations among individuals aged 18-59 years in 2013. Shown as adjusted odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals. Reference state: Alabama (alphabetic selection).
Figure 7.Heat map of model-adjusted compliance with age-appropriate recommended influenza and Tdap vaccinations among individuals aged 18-59 years in 2013.
Model-adjusted compliance with age-appropriate recommended vaccinations in 10 states.
| Influenza, Tdap, HZ vaccines (2014) | Influenza, Tdap, HZ, pneumococcal vaccines (2014) | |
|---|---|---|
| Aged 60-64 years | Aged ≥65 years | |
| % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | |
| Overall compliance | 6.61 (5.94, 7.28) | 11.21 (9.51, 12.91) |
| Compliance by state: | ||
| California | 5.51 (2.39, 12.17) | 13.53 (9.14, 19.57) |
| Colorado | 9.52 (6.69, 13.38) | 14.82 (11.46, 18.96) |
| Georgia | 6.12 (3.78, 9.75) | 6.02 (3.81, 9.38) |
| Massachusetts | 6.78 (4.80, 9.51) | 10.32 (7.75, 13.61) |
| Mississippi | 4.13 (1.61, 10.21) | 2.99 (1.53, 5.77) |
| Rhode Island | 5.60 (3.95, 7.89) | 9.43 (6.93, 12.72) |
| Tennessee | 4.35 (2.24, 8.27) | 7.71 (5.15, 11.39) |
| Texas | 7.76 (5.14, 11.56) | 10.34 (6.89, 15.26) |
| Vermont | 14.40 (10.74, 19.05) | 18.26 (14.48, 22.76) |
| Virginia | 7.60 (5.53, 10.36) | 10.63 (7.96, 14.06) |
CI, confidence interval; HZ, herpes zoster; Tdap, tetanus-diptheria-acellular pertussis
Based on data from states which selected a BRFSS survey module that provided age-appropriate outcomes;
Not representative at the national level