Schwartz Kendra L, Neale Anne Victoria, Northrup Justin, Monsur Joseph, Patel Divya A, Tobar Rodrigo, Wortley Pascale M
Department of Family Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2006 Apr;21(4):346-51. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2006.00401.x.
Despite known benefits of influenza vaccination and coverage by Medicare Part B, elderly minority patients are less likely to receive influenza vaccination than whites.
To test whether a nonphysician-initiated standardized offer of influenza vaccination to all elderly primary care patients would result in similar proportions of African-American and white patients accepting vaccine.
In 7 metropolitan Detroit primary care practices during the 2003 influenza vaccination season, medical assistants assessed influenza immunization status of all patients 65 years and older and collected limited demographic data. Eligible patients were offered vaccination.
Proportion of patients accepting influenza vaccination by race and predictors of vaccine acceptance.
Four hundred and fifty-four eligible patients with complete racial information were enrolled: 40% African American, 52% white, 8% other race/ethnicity. Similar proportions of African Americans and whites had already received the 2003 vaccine (11.6% and 11.0%, respectively) or stated vaccination as the reason for visit (23.8% and 30.5%, respectively). Among the remainder, there also were similar proportions who accepted vaccination: 68.9% white and 62.1% African-American patients. History of previous vaccination was the only statistically significant predictor of vaccine acceptance (odds ratio [OR] 8.64, 95% confidence interval [CI] 4.17, 17.91, P<.001). After adjusting for history of previous vaccination, age, gender, and education, the odds of vaccine acceptance were no different for whites and African Americans (OR 1.20, 95% CI 0.63, 2.29, P=.57).
Vaccination acceptance differed little between African-American and white elderly patients. Using nonphysician personnel to identify and offer influenza vaccine to eligible patients is easily accomplished in primary care offices and has the potential to eliminate racial disparities in influenza vaccination.
尽管流感疫苗接种有已知益处且医疗保险B部分涵盖了相关费用,但老年少数族裔患者接种流感疫苗的可能性低于白人。
测试向所有老年初级保健患者提供由非医生发起的标准化流感疫苗接种提议是否会使非裔美国人和白人患者接受疫苗的比例相似。
在2003年流感疫苗接种季节,底特律7个大都市的初级保健机构中,医疗助理评估了所有65岁及以上患者的流感免疫状况,并收集了有限的人口统计学数据。符合条件的患者被提供疫苗接种。
按种族划分的接受流感疫苗接种的患者比例以及疫苗接种接受情况的预测因素。
纳入了454名有完整种族信息的符合条件患者:40%为非裔美国人,52%为白人,8%为其他种族/族裔。相似比例的非裔美国人和白人已经接种了2003年疫苗(分别为11.6%和11.0%)或表示接种疫苗是就诊原因(分别为23.8%和30.5%)。在其余患者中,接受疫苗接种的比例也相似:白人患者为68.9%,非裔美国患者为62.1%。既往接种史是疫苗接种接受情况唯一具有统计学意义的预测因素(比值比[OR]8.64,95%置信区间[CI]4.17,17.91,P<0.001)。在调整了既往接种史、年龄、性别和教育程度后,白人和非裔美国人接受疫苗接种的几率没有差异(OR 1.20,95%CI 0.63,2.29,P = 0.57)。
非裔美国和白人老年患者在疫苗接种接受情况上差异不大。在初级保健机构中,使用非医生人员识别并向符合条件的患者提供流感疫苗很容易实现,并且有可能消除流感疫苗接种中的种族差异。