Screening Hospital Employees for Measles Immunity Is More Cost Effective than Blind Immunization
- 15 June 1992
- journal article
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 116 (12_Part_1), 982-984
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-116-12-982
Abstract
To examine alternative strategies in developing a cost-effective program to assure measles immunity among hospital employees. Observational. Referral teaching hospital. Eighteen hundred "established" hospital employees with potential patient contact and 630 newly hired hospital employees. Established employees born after 1 January 1957 and all newly hired employees were screened for serologic evidence of measles immunity and immunized if necessary. Cost analysis. The cost of screening and directed immunization of established employees was $3.98 per employee compared with a potential cost of $10.03 to $42.80 per employee if all employees were "blindly" immunized with monovalent measles vaccine or trivalent mumps-measles-rubella vaccine. The cost of the screening and directed immunization of new employees was $2.42 per employee compared with potential costs of $8.30 to $39.34 per employee for blind immunization. These analyses assumed that varying percentages of employees would be able to produce documentation of having received a previous dose of vaccine or of having had measles. In a large referral hospital, screening for measles immunity followed by directed immunization was considerably less expensive than immunizing all potentially susceptible employees.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Measles EpidemicJAMA, 1991
- Transmission of measles in medical settings—United States, 1985–1989The American Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Prevention of mumps, measles, and rubella among hospital personnelThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1991
- Prevaccination Serologic Screening for Measles in Health Care WorkersThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1991
- Measles Antibody: Reevaluation of Protective TitersThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1990
- Immunity to Measles in a Large Population of Varying AgeAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1990
- Mumps Transmission in HospitalsArchives of Internal Medicine, 1990
- The role of secondary vaccine failures in measles outbreaks.American Journal of Public Health, 1989
- Transmission of Measles in Medical SettingsPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1986
- Comparison of measles antihemolysin test, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and hemagglutination inhibition test with neutralization test for determination of immune statusJournal of Clinical Microbiology, 1985