Improving the Public Health/Physician Partnership for Influenza Vaccination
Background: Alberta doctors can request supplies of publicly funded influenza vaccine to administer to patients who meet provincial program criteria. Purpose: To describe the proportions of Alberta family doctors who vaccinate patients, the sources from which they obtain vaccine and their evaluation...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Canadian journal of public health 2005-03, Vol.96 (2), p.155-158 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Alberta doctors can request supplies of publicly funded influenza vaccine to administer to patients who meet provincial program criteria. Purpose: To describe the proportions of Alberta family doctors who vaccinate patients, the sources from which they obtain vaccine and their evaluation of public health influenza vaccination program components. Methods: Cross-sectional postal survey, 2003. Doctors were asked to complete a ninepage questionnaire or to answer a one-page "mini-survey". The proportion of physicians who vaccinated patients against influenza was estimated separately for the main questionnaire and the mini-survey. Frequencies and cross-tabulations were used to examine sources of vaccine supply and physician ratings of five aspects of influenza vaccine program services provided by Regional Health Authorities (RHA). Results: The survey response rate was 52.3% (1387/2650); an additional 14% (372) returned a mini-survey. The proportion of respondents who vaccinated one or more patients against influenza in the fall of 2002 was 81.5% for the main questionnaire and 83.1% for the mini-survey. Vaccine was most commonly obtained from the RHA. Three items were rated as poor/fair by more than 10% of respondents: provision of information for distribution to patients (37%), timeliness of vaccine delivery to offices (16%) and vaccine availability over the entire influenza season (18%). Item ratings varied by RHA but provision of information for distribution to patients was consistently a problem. Conclusion: A high priority should be placed on improving resources for doctors to give to patients, timeliness of vaccine deliveries to doctors' offices and vaccine availability over the entire season. Contexte : Les médecins de l'Alberta peuvent demander des stocks de vaccins antigrippaux subventionnés par l'État pour les administrer aux patients qui respectent les critères du programme provincial. Objet : Déterminer la proportion de médecins de famille de l'Alberta qui vaccinent des patients, leurs sources d'approvisionnement en vaccins et leur évaluation de divers aspects du programme de santé publique axé sur les vaccins antigrippaux. Méthode : Dans le cadre d'une enquête postale transversale menée en 2003, nous avons demandé aux médecins de remplir un questionnaire de neuf pages ou un mini-questionnaire d'une page. La proportion de médecins qui vaccinaient leurs patients contre l'influenza a été estimée séparément selon le questionnaire auquel ces m |
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ISSN: | 0008-4263 1920-7476 |
DOI: | 10.1007/BF03403681 |