Effectiveness of a web-based education program to improve vaccine storage conditions in primary care (Keep Cool): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.

Anika Thielmann, Anja Viehmann, Birgitta M Weltermann
Author Information
  1. Anika Thielmann: Institute for General Medicine, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Hufelandstr. 55, 45147, Essen, Germany. Anika.Thielmann@uk-essen.de.
  2. Anja Viehmann: Institute for General Medicine, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Hufelandstr. 55, 45147, Essen, Germany. Anja.Viehmann@uk-essen.de.
  3. Birgitta M Weltermann: Institute for General Medicine, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Hufelandstr. 55, 45147, Essen, Germany. Birgitta.Weltermann@uk-essen.de.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Immunization programs are among the most effective public health strategies worldwide. Adequate vaccine storage is a prerequisite to assure the vaccines' effectiveness and safety. In a questionnaire survey among a random sample of German primary care physicians, we discovered vaccine storage deficits: 16% of physicians had experience with cold chain breaches either as an error or near error, 49 % did not keep a temperature log, and 21 % did not use a separate refrigerator for vaccine storage. In a recent feasibility study of 21 practice refrigerators, we showed that these were outside the target range 10.2% of the total time with some single refrigerators being outside the target range as much as 66.3% of the time. These cooling-chain deficits are consistent with the international medical literature, yet an effective, easy to disseminate, practice-centered intervention to improve storage conditions is lacking.
METHODS/DESIGN: This randomized intervention trial will be conducted in a random sample of primary care practices. Based on continuous temperature recordings over 7 days, all practices with readings outside the target range for vaccine storage (+2 °C to +8 °C) will be randomly allocated to a web-based education program or a waiting list control group. The practice physicians and their teams constitute the target population. Participants will be educated about best practices in vaccine storage and will receive a manual including storage checklists and templates for temperature documentation. In all practices, temperatures of the vaccine refrigerators will be monitored continuously using a data logger with a glycol probe as a surrogate for vaccine vial temperature. The effectiveness of the web-based education program will be determined after 6 months in terms of the proportion of refrigerators with vaccine vial temperatures within the target range (+2 °C to +8 °C) during 7-day temperature logging. Secondary outcome parameters include temperature monitoring, no critically low temperatures (≤ -0.5 °C), compliance with storage recommendations, knowledge of good vaccine storage conditions, and assignment of personnel as vaccine storage manager and backup.
DISCUSSION: Keep Cool will develop and evaluate a web-based education program to improve vaccine storage conditions in primary care and thereby ensure immunization safety and effectiveness.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: DRKS00006561 (date of registration: 20 February 2015).

Associated Data

DRKS | DRKS00006561

References

  1. Vaccine. 2007 May 16;25(20):3980-6 [PMID: 17382434]
  2. BMC Res Notes. 2015 Apr 14;8:145 [PMID: 25884186]
  3. BMJ. 1996 Jun 29;312(7047):1651-2 [PMID: 8664720]
  4. Aust Fam Physician. 2008 Oct;37(10):892-6 [PMID: 19002316]
  5. Am J Prev Med. 2002 Nov;23(4):246-53 [PMID: 12406478]
  6. Aust N Z J Public Health. 2001 Dec;25(6):547-50; discussion 551 [PMID: 11824993]
  7. Med J Aust. 1999 Jul 19;171(2):83-4 [PMID: 10474583]
  8. Ann Intern Med. 2009 Sep 15;151(6):369-78 [PMID: 19755362]
  9. Ann Behav Med. 2008 Apr;35(2):125-35 [PMID: 18363076]
  10. Prev Med. 2010 Sep-Oct;51(3-4):214-21 [PMID: 20558196]
  11. J Contin Educ Health Prof. 2004 Summer;24(3):171-80 [PMID: 15490549]
  12. J Contin Educ Health Prof. 2004 Winter;24(1):20-30 [PMID: 15069909]
  13. Am J Health Behav. 2003 Nov-Dec;27 Suppl 3:S227-32 [PMID: 14672383]
  14. Pediatrics. 2001 Jun;107(6):E100 [PMID: 11389298]
  15. Can Fam Physician. 1995 Jul;41:1169-76 [PMID: 7647622]
  16. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2011 Aug 26;60(33):1128-32 [PMID: 21866086]
  17. Lancet. 2003 Oct 11;362(9391):1225-30 [PMID: 14568747]
  18. PLoS One. 2014 Aug 13;9(8):e105119 [PMID: 25118779]
  19. J Prev Med Public Health. 2012 Mar;45(2):78-89 [PMID: 22509448]
  20. Aust N Z J Public Health. 1999 Feb;23(1):6-10 [PMID: 10083683]

MeSH Term

Checklist
Cold Temperature
Computer-Assisted Instruction
Drug Stability
Drug Storage
Education, Medical, Continuing
Germany
Guideline Adherence
Humans
Immunization
Internet
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Primary Health Care
Prospective Studies
Quality Improvement
Quality Indicators, Health Care
Refrigeration
Research Design
Time Factors
Vaccines

Chemicals

Vaccines

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0vaccinestoragewilltemperaturetarget°Cprimarycarerefrigeratorsrangeconditionspracticesweb-basededucationprogrameffectivenessphysiciansoutsideimprovetemperaturesamongeffectivesafetyrandomsampleerror%21studypracticetimeinterventionrandomizedtrial+2+8vialKeepCoolBACKGROUND:ImmunizationprogramspublichealthstrategiesworldwideAdequateprerequisiteassurevaccines'questionnairesurveyGermandiscovereddeficits:16%experiencecoldchainbreacheseithernear49keeploguseseparaterefrigeratorrecentfeasibilityshowed102%totalsinglemuch663%cooling-chaindeficitsconsistentinternationalmedicalliteratureyeteasydisseminatepractice-centeredlackingMETHODS/DESIGN:conductedBasedcontinuousrecordings7daysreadingsrandomlyallocatedwaitinglistcontrolgroupteamsconstitutepopulationParticipantseducatedbestreceivemanualincludingcheckliststemplatesdocumentationmonitoredcontinuouslyusingdataloggerglycolprobesurrogatedetermined6monthstermsproportionwithin7-dayloggingSecondaryoutcomeparametersincludemonitoringcriticallylow-05compliancerecommendationsknowledgegoodassignmentpersonnelmanagerbackupDISCUSSION:developevaluatetherebyensureimmunizationTRIALREGISTRATION:DRKS00006561dateregistration:20February2015Effectiveness:protocolcontrolled

Similar Articles

Cited By