Title: Universal Influenza Vaccine
1Universal Influenza Vaccine
- How To Make It Work
- A State Perspective
- Beth Rowe-West, Head
- Immunization Branch
- Division of Public Health
- North Carolina DHHS
- Immediate Past Chair, AIM
2Why We Should Expand the Recommendation
- Reduction in morbidity and mortality
- Decrease transmission in a major reservoir
children - Potential to achieve some level of herd immunity
annually - Improved ability to respond to pandemic
- Lessen confusion about priority groups
- Sends a message that flu is a serious health
threat - Potential to expand and stabilize the flu vaccine
marketplace
3Challenges
- Public/private partnership
- National, state and local
- Affordability
- Service delivery to all socio-economic
populations - Collecting data from non-traditional health care
sites - Misperceptions about Flu vaccine
4Ten Ingredients for Success
- Stable vaccine market
- Expansion of 317 funding
- Support from health care providers
- Effective public awareness campaign
- Dispelling the myths
- No thimerosal
- Enhance surveillance
- Influence supply driver
- Phased-in approach
- Effective public/private partnership
51. Stable vaccine market
- Adequate supply
- Practical distribution
- Willingness to achieve high profit margin from
increase product sales as opposed to higher
cost/dose
62. Expansion of 317 program (vaccine and
operations)
- Relies on currently successful infrastructure of
state immunization programs - Allows for streamlined service delivery
- Eliminates cost as a barrier
- Provides support to local agencies
- Funds public awareness efforts
- Supports state and local efforts
73. Support from healthcare providers
- Exemplify
- Educate
- Promote
- Vaccinate
84. Effective Public Awareness Campaign
- National primetime PSAs
- Statewide media coverage
- Local media coverage
- Multiple translations/media outlets
95. Dispel the Myths
- Flu vaccine causes flu
- Duke Clinical Research Institute Reason for
refusal for up to 48 of patients - Flu vaccine not effective
- Duke Clinical Research Institute Reason for
refusal for 26 of patients - Flu vaccine only works when given in
OctoberNovember at the latest! - I hardly ever get the flubesides, flu is not
all that serious. - Improving Rates of Influenza Immunization in
Asthma Patients A Duke Primary Care Research
Consortium Study
10Top Reasons for Not Receiving Flu Vaccine
11Administrative Data Univariate Analysis of Age
- Nonlinear in both years
- High in young children, decrease steadily until
age 25, then increase steadily, reaching highest
level at age 70 - P0.001, logistic regression with 3 slopes
- Ranges 1-26, 27-73, and 74 and older
126. Eliminate Thimerosal
137. Enhanced Surveillance Using Registries
- Documentation in registries essential
- Second dose
- Pandemic
- Tracking
- Mapping (learning lessons from Katrina)
- Streamlined data collection
- Data exchanges desirable
- Aggregate data for reporting
- Patient specific for billing purposes (admin fee)
- Scanable devices needed for mass clinics
148. Influence Supply Driver
- Recommendation vs historical demand
159. Phased in Approach
- If adequate funding not immediately available,
consider phased-in approach (similar to earlier
hepatitis B recommendations) - Currently, high risk groups recommended
- latest addition of 6-24 month olds a potential
beginning of phased-in approach - Next step primary school age children?
(grades k-5)
1610. Effective Public/Private Partnerships
- National Leadership, Education
- State Coordination, Education
- Local Collaboration, Education, Vaccination
17National Leadership, Education
- AMA
- AAP
- DOE
- Pharmaceutical companies
- up front vaccine purchase cost
- ACIP
- CMS Creation of Vaccine for Adults Program -
funding reallocation to NIP from
Medicaid/Medicare to avoid - Media Outlets
- Others
18State Coordination, Education
- Other state agencies
- Regional planning teams
- Support from Governor, General Assembly
- Medical and nursing schools
- Insurers
- State AAP, AMA
- Hospital Association (vaccinate at exit points
for both inpatient and outpatient, grand rounds
participation - Retired nurses network
- Hot Line/Help Desk/Flu-finder
- Media Outlets
19Local Collaboration, Education and Administration
- Businesses
- Work site administration
- Retail vaccination sites
- Schools, colleges/universities
- Healthcare network
- Home health agencies, hospitals, SNFs
- Churches
- Expanded hours and weekends
- Expand staff or volunteer effort during flu
vaccine season - Outreach to populations without transportation
- Senior Centers
- Autodialers
- Some mass clinics necessary
- Drive through clinics
- Crowd control
20Strategies
- Multiple administration sites needed to vaccinate
large number of individuals within short
timeframe - Administration fees (and 3rd party reimbursement)
should be significant enough to be an incentive
for the private sector, whether a health care
provider or non-traditional sites (eg, retail
shopping) - Duplication of school-site initiatives to
increase coverage among school age children - Worksites initiatives
- Phased-in approach
21Where Do We Go From Here?
- Consider phased in approach over the next 3-5
years, beginning with school age children. This
should help - Jump start a decline in flu morbidity and
mortality - Stabilize vaccine market
- Enhance immunization program infrastructure
- Meanwhile
- Encourage pharmaceutical companies to eliminate
thimerosal from flu vaccine - Significantly reduce highly prevalent patient
misconceptions about flu vaccine. - Significantly increase flu vaccine coverage rates
among healthcare workers. - Educate the public about the necessity of flu
vaccine. - Develop VFA program
- Plan for expansion
22Questions?