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Influenza Immunization in Nursing Homes: Who Does Not Get Immunized and Whose Status is Unknown. Jill A. Marsteller, PhD, MPP, Ronald Tiggle, PhD, Robin Remsburg, PhD, Abigail Shefer, MD and Barbara Bardenheier, MPH, MA. National Center for Health Statistics
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Influenza Immunization in Nursing Homes: Who Does Not Get Immunized and Whose Status is Unknown Jill A. Marsteller, PhD, MPP, Ronald Tiggle, PhD, Robin Remsburg, PhD, Abigail Shefer, MD and Barbara Bardenheier, MPH, MA National Center for Health Statistics and the National Immunization Program of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention NCHS July 11, 2006
Context • Some 32,400 influenza-related deaths among those >65 annually between 1990 and 1999 • Particular risk for exposure in nursing homes But… • Fifteen percent of nursing home residents were unimmunized for influenza in 1999 • Nineteen percent had unknown immunization status NCHS July 11, 2006
Objectives • To analyze, in a nationally representative sample (the NNHS) • … both the resident AND facility characteristics associated with • … not receiving influenza immunization • … AND with unknown influenza immunization status NCHS July 11, 2006
Methods • Influenza immunization among nursing home residents >65 from the 1999 National Nursing Home Survey • 7,194 residents living in 1,423 facilities • Multinomial logistic regression • Three-level outcome • ‘Received immunization’ is referent group • Used SAS and SUDAAN NCHS July 11, 2006
Dependent Variable • “During the past 12 months, has [the resident] had an influenza vaccination at this facility or any other location?” The measure has three response categories: “yes,” “no,” or “unknown.” • Facility staff check all relevant records when responding • A survey response of unknown is marked • if there is no evidence in any records of the resident’s immunization status • if the record states that status is unknown NCHS July 11, 2006
Resident characteristics pneumococcal immunization age length of nursing home stay primary payment source level of care high-risk diagnosis Facility characteristics number of beds Medicare/Medicaid certification ownership membership in a chain metropolitan statistical area geographic region assesses immunization status upon admission organized immunization program records immunization status in the medical record requires staff to be immunized Independent Variables NCHS July 11, 2006
Significant Variables for No Immunization v. Yes Controlling for: chain, MSA/non-MSA, ownership, region, staff vaccinations, bedsize, primary payment source, race, high risk diagnosis, and eating assistance NCHS July 11, 2006
Significant Variables for UK Immunization v. Yes Controlling for: age, level of care, chain, region, ownership, MSA/non-MSA, staff vaccinations, organized immunization program, bedsize, race, and high-risk diagnosis NCHS July 11, 2006
Unknowns are Different • Two binary logistic regressions test whether unknowns are distinguishable from other categories • Yes v. Unknown,Wald F=36.97, p<0.0001 • Unknowns more likely: length of stay <6 months, unknown pneumonia vaccination, no eating assistance • Live in facilities with dual Medicare and Medicaid certification, no screening, no recording • No v. Unknown, Wald F=15.78, p<0.0001 • Unknowns less likely residential care, immunized for pneumonia, in facilities with >100 beds • Unknowns more likely unknown pneumonia vaccination, Medicare as payment source (Long, 1997). NCHS July 11, 2006
Discussion • Both resident and facility characteristics are associated with not being immunized and unknown immunization status • Important covariates are pneumococcal immunization status, length of stay, facility certification, screening and recording • Notably unimportant are staff vaccination policies and high-risk status of residents • Residents with unknown vaccination are statistically different from the immunized and the unimmunized NCHS July 11, 2006
Conclusions • About 34 percent of residents did not receive immunizations in the last 12 months or had an unknown status • Results suggest • Targeted education for residents, staff • Facility screening for and recording immunization • Residents with unknown immunization are • Too different from both those who do and do not receive vaccinations to justify lumping categories • Should be analyzed separately • Current policy of not immunizing unknowns may be appropriate NCHS July 11, 2006