The Effects of Influenza Vaccination of Health Care Workers in Nursing Homes: Insights from a Mathematical Model
Authored by Janneke C M Heijne, Jacco Wallinga, den Dool Carline van, Eelko Hak, Marc J M Bonten
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0050200
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background
Annual influenza vaccination of institutional health care workers (HCWs)
is advised in most Western countries, but adherence to this
recommendation is generally low. Although protective effects of this
intervention for nursing home patients have been demonstrated in some
clinical trials, the exact relationship between increased vaccine uptake
among HCWs and protection of patients remains unknown owing to
variations between study designs, settings, intensity of influenza
seasons, and failure to control all effect modifiers. Therefore, we use
a mathematical model to estimate the effects of HCW vaccination in
different scenarios and to identify a herd immunity threshold in a
nursing home department.
Methods and Findings
We use a stochastic individual-based model with discrete time intervals
to simulate influenza virus transmission in a 30-bed long-term care
nursing home department. We simulate different levels of HCW vaccine
uptake and study the effect on influenza virus attack rates among
patients for different institutional and seasonal scenarios. Our model
reveals a robust linear relationship between the number of HCWs
vaccinated and the expected number of influenza virus infections among
patients. In a realistic scenario, approximately 60\% of influenza virus
infections among patients can be prevented when the HCW vaccination rate
increases from 0 to 1. A threshold for herd immunity is not detected.
Due to stochastic variations, the differences in patient attack rates
between departments are high and large outbreaks can occur for every
level of HCW vaccine uptake.
Conclusions
The absence of herd immunity in nursing homes implies that vaccination
of every additional HCW protects an additional fraction of patients.
Because of large stochastic variations, results of small-sized clinical
trials on the effects of HCW vaccination should be interpreted with
great care. Moreover, the large variations in attack rates should be
taken into account when designing future studies.
Tags
Uncertainty
Infection
sensitivity
transmission
Rates
Randomized controlled-trial
Facilities
Long-term-care
Elderly-people
Sample-size