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Evaluation of a city-wide school-located influenza vaccination program in Oakland, California, with respect to vaccination coverage, school absences, and laboratory-confirmed influenza: A matched cohort study.

Jade Benjamin-ChungBenjamin F ArnoldChris J KennedyKunal MishraNolan N PokpongkiatAnna T NguyenWendy JilekKate HolbrookErica PanPam D KirleyTanya E LibbyAlan E HubbardArthur ReingoldJohn M Colford
Published in: PLoS medicine (2020)
A city-wide SLIV intervention in a large, diverse urban population was associated with a decrease in the incidence of laboratory-confirmed influenza hospitalization in all age groups and a decrease in illness-specific school absence rate among students in 2016-2017 and 2017-2018, seasons when the vaccine was moderately effective, suggesting that the intervention produced indirect effects. Our findings suggest that in populations with moderately high background levels of influenza vaccination coverage, SLIV programs are associated with further increases in coverage and reduced influenza across the community.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • high school
  • physical activity
  • affordable care act
  • randomized controlled trial
  • healthcare
  • risk factors
  • quality improvement
  • health insurance