Publication | Open Access
Influenza Vaccination Coverage Among Health Care Personnel — United States, 2015–16 Influenza Season
149
Citations
9
References
2016
Year
Advisory CommitteeFlu VaccinationVaccine HesitancyHealth Care PersonnelHospital MedicineInfluenza VaccinesPreventive MedicineVaccine SurveillanceVaccination CoveragePublic HealthInfluenza SeasonHealth Services ResearchVaccinologyVaccine SafetyHealth PolicyPublic Health PolicyHealth ReimbursementInfluenza Vaccination CoverageEpidemiologyVaccinationHealth SystemsVaccine EfficacyInfluenza VaccineMedicine
The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommends annual influenza vaccination for all health care personnel to reduce influenza-related morbidity and mortality among both health care personnel and their patients (1-4). To estimate influenza vaccination coverage among U.S. health care personnel for the 2015-16 influenza season, CDC conducted an opt-in Internet panel survey of 2,258 health care personnel during March 28-April 14, 2016. Overall, 79.0% of survey participants reported receiving an influenza vaccination during the 2015-16 season, similar to the 77.3% coverage reported for the 2014-15 season (5). Coverage in long-term care settings increased by 5.3 percentage points compared with the previous season. Vaccination coverage continued to be higher among health care personnel working in hospitals (91.2%) and lower among health care personnel working in ambulatory (79.8%) and long-term care settings (69.2%). Coverage continued to be highest among physicians (95.6%) and lowest among assistants and aides (64.1%), and highest overall among health care personnel who were required by their employer to be vaccinated (96.5%). Among health care personnel working in settings where vaccination was neither required, promoted, nor offered onsite, vaccination coverage continued to be low (44.9%). An increased percentage of health care personnel reporting a vaccination requirement or onsite vaccination availability compared with earlier influenza seasons might have contributed to the overall increase in vaccination coverage during the past 6 influenza seasons.
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