Quantifying the Economic Value and Quality of Life Impact of Earlier Influenza Vaccination
Authored by Philip Cooley, Sarah M Bartsch, Bruce Y Lee, Shawn T Brown, William D Wheaton, Richard K Zimmerman
Date Published: 2015
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Abstract
Background: Influenza vaccination is administered throughout the
influenza disease season, even as late as March. Given such timing, what
is the value of vaccinating the population earlier than currently being
practiced?
Methods: We used real data on when individuals were vaccinated in
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, and the following 2 models to determine
the value of vaccinating individuals earlier (by the end of September, October, and November): Framework for Reconstructing Epidemiological
Dynamics (FRED), an agent-based model (ABM), and FluEcon, our influenza
economic model that translates cases from the ABM to outcomes and costs
{[}health care and lost productivity costs and quality-adjusted
life-years (QALYs)]. We varied the reproductive number (R-0) from 1.2 to
1.6.
Results: Applying the current timing of vaccinations averted 223,761
influenza cases, \$16.3 million in direct health care costs, \$50.0
million in productivity losses, and 804 in QALYs, compared with no
vaccination (February peak, R-0 1.2). When the population does not have
preexisting immunity and the influenza season peaks in February (R-0
1.2-1.6), moving individuals who currently received the vaccine after
September to the end of September could avert an additional 9634-17,794
influenza cases, \$0.6-\$1.4 million in direct costs, \$2.1-\$4.0
million in productivity losses, and 35-64 QALYs. Moving the vaccination
of just children to September (R-0 1.2-1.6) averted 11,366-1660
influenza cases, \$0.6-\$0.03 million in direct costs, \$2.3-\$0.2
million in productivity losses, and 42-8 QALYs. Moving the season peak
to December increased these benefits, whereas increasing preexisting
immunity reduced these benefits.
Conclusion: Even though many people are vaccinated well after
September/October, they likely are still vaccinated early enough to
provide substantial cost-savings.
Tags
Simulation
protection
cost-effectiveness
Epidemic
disease
Strategies
Seasonal influenza
United-states
Pandemic
influenza
Children