Medicare Advantage-Pharmacy Partnership Improves Influenza and Pneumococcal Vaccination Rates

Richard L Sheer, David P Nau,Nicholas Dorich, Annette D Boyer, Matthew Pickering,Patrick J Campbell,Margaret K Pasquale

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MANAGED CARE(2021)

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摘要
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of a collaborative effort of a Medicare Advantage and prescription drug (MAPD) plan and community pharmacies to improve vaccination rates for pneumonia and influenza. STUDY DESIGN: This quasiexperimental, cluster-randomized intervention study used MAPD data to assess the impact of community pharmacists on vaccination rates. Pharmacies in specific regions (districts) were randomly assigned to intervention or control groups. Intervention pharmacies received reports of patients with a gap in influenza (aged 19-89 years) and/or pneumococcal (aged 65-89 years) vaccinations based on medical and pharmacy claims history. Vaccine-ndive patients were offered vaccinations. METHODS: The vaccination rates for the previously vaccinenaive patients utilizing intervention and control pharmacies were compared 6 months post randomization. Inverse probability weighted hierarchical generalized linear models determined the odds of receiving pneumonia and influenza vaccinations for intervention and control groups, controlling for baseline clinical and demographic characteristics. RESULTS: Intervention and control groups had similar ages in the pneumococcal older-adult cohort (mean age, 73.0 vs 73.4 years, respectively; P=.1255). The intervention group was older than the control group in the influenza cohort (mean age, 67.7 vs 66.4 years, respectively; P=.00061. Slightly more than half of each cohort were women, and the proportion of women was not significantly different between the intervention and control groups in each cohort. In multivariable analyses, intervention pharmacies were associated with higher odds of delivering pneumococcal (odds ratio [OR], 1.91; 95% CI, 1.26-2.871 and influenza (OR, 2.18; 95% CI, 1.37-3.461 vaccinations than control pharmacies. CONCLUSIONS: A health plan-enabled, pharmacist-led intervention was effective in increasing the number of older adults receiving pneumococcal vaccination and individuals receiving influenza vaccination.
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Vaccination
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