• Am J Infect Control · Oct 2008

    Self-reported influenza vaccination rates among health care workers in a large health system.

    • Mary Patricia Nowalk, Chyongchiou J Lin, Richard K Zimmerman, Dwight E Fox, Mahlon Raymund, Mark D Tanis, Jay D Harper, and Bayo C Willis.
    • Department of Family Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA. tnowalk@pitt.edu
    • Am J Infect Control. 2008 Oct 1;36(8):574-81.

    BackgroundThe national health care worker (HCW) influenza vaccination rate is only 42% despite recommendations that HCWs receive influenza vaccine to prevent influenza among patients.MethodsFollowing an educational intervention to improve influenza vaccination in 6 facilities in a large health system (University of Pittsburgh Medical Center), surveys were mailed to 1200 nonphysician HCWs to determine factors related to influenza vaccination and inform the following year's intervention. HCWs were proportionally sampled with oversampling for minority HCWs, and analyses were weighted to adjust for the clustered nature of the data.ResultsResponse rate was 61%. Influenza vaccination rates were 77% overall, 65% for minority HCWs and 80% for white HCWs (P = .02) for ever receiving vaccine; and 57% overall, 45% for minority HCWs and 60% for white HCWs (P = .009) for receiving vaccine in 2005-2006. In logistic regression, belief that getting vaccinated against influenza is wise, physician recommendation, and older age were associated with higher likelihood of vaccination, whereas minority race and good health were associated with lower likelihood of ever receiving influenza vaccine.ConclusionTo increase influenza vaccination, interventions should address HCWs' most important reasons for getting vaccinated: convenience and protecting themselves from influenza.

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