Standing orders for influenza and pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccination: correlates identified in a national survey of U.S. Primary care physicians.

Steven M Albert, Mary Patricia Nowalk, Michael A Yonas, Richard K Zimmerman, Faruque Ahmed
Author Information
  1. Steven M Albert: Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. smalbert@pitt.edu

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Standing orders programs (SOPs) allow non-physician medical staff to assess eligibility and administer vaccines without a specific physician's order. SOPs increase vaccination rates but are underutilized.
METHOD: In 2009, correlates of SOPs use for influenza vaccine and pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccination (PPV) were assessed in a nationally representative, stratified random sample of U.S. physicians (n = 880) in family and internal medicine who provided office immunization. The response rate was 67%. Physicians reporting no SOPs, only influenza SOPs, and joint influenza and PPV SOPs were compared using multinomial and logistic regression models to examine individual and practice-level correlates.
RESULTS: 23% reported using SOPs consistently for both influenza vaccine and PPV, and 20% for influenza vaccination only, with the remainder not using SOPs. Practice-level factors that distinguished practices with joint influenza-PPV SOPs included perceived practice openness to change, strong practice teamwork, access to an electronic medical record, presence of an immunization champion in the practice, and access to nurse/physician assistant staff as opposed to medical assistants alone.
DISCUSSION: Physicians in practices with SOPs for both vaccines reported greater awareness of ACIP recommendations and/or Medicare regulations and were more likely to agree that SOPs are an effective way to boost vaccination coverage. However, implementation of both influenza and PPV SOPs was also associated with a variety of practice-level factors, including teamwork, the presence of an immunization champion, and greater availability of clinical assistants with advanced training.
CONCLUSIONS: Practice-level factors are critical for the adoption of more complex SOPs, such as joint SOPs for influenza and PPV.

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Grants

  1. P30 AG024827/NIA NIH HHS
  2. UL1 TR000005/NCATS NIH HHS
  3. UL1 RR024153/NCRR NIH HHS
  4. KL2 TR000146/NCATS NIH HHS
  5. U50 CD300-860-21/ODCDC CDC HHS

MeSH Term

Female
Guideline Adherence
Health Care Surveys
Humans
Immunization Programs
Influenza Vaccines
Logistic Models
Male
Medical Staff
Pneumococcal Vaccines
Primary Health Care
United States

Chemicals

Influenza Vaccines
Pneumococcal Vaccines

Word Cloud

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