Article de revue

Effect of a novel birth intervention and reminder-recall on on-time immunization compliance in high-risk children.

OBJECTIVES: Profound racial/ethnic immunization rate disparities exist among young children in Chicago. We created BIRTH PIP- a program combining immunization education at birth with ongoing reminder-recall- to achieve greater than 90% on-time adherence with AAP/ACIP immunization recommendations among inner-city children aged 0-35 months. The study also examines the cost of this effort. RESULTS: A total of 400 neonates were enrolled. At all examined time points- on-time immunization rates exceeded city-wide data. Of those completing the program- 92% of children had 100% compliance with prescribed immunizations by 24 months. No child required follow-up past 29 months. Retention was an important problem- primarily due to pre-set eligibility requirements. Mean cost per child to complete recommended immunizations was \$288. Compliant families were less expensive to maintain. STUDY DESIGN: Outreach workers met with post-partum mothers who were English speaking- Chicago residents and receiving Medicaid- to provide

Langues

  • Anglais

Année de publication

2009

Journal

Human vaccines

Volume

6

Type

Article de revue

Catégories

  • Données

Mots-clés

  • TIC

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Vora et al. - 2009 - Effect of a novel birth intervention and reminder-recall on on-time immunization compliance in high-risk childre2.pdf

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