Childhood Vaccination Providers in the United States
Charles W. LeBaron, MD,
Bridget Lyons, MPH,
Mehran Massoudi, PhD, MPH and
John Stevenson, MA
The authors are with the National Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Charles W. LeBaron, MD, Mail Stop E-61, National Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333 (e-mail: cel3{at}cdc.gov).
Objectives. This study sought to provide a characterizationof US childhood vaccination providers.
Methods. The state was used as the analytic unit in examining1997 data from the National Immunization Survey and the Vaccinesfor Children program, state immunization reports, and natalityrecords.
Results. Overall, 57% of children were vaccinated in the privatesector, 18% were vaccinated in the public sector, and 25% werevaccinated by a mixture of providers. Of the 50 883 immunizationsites, 81% were private and 19% public. Average patient loadwas 77 infants per site. Private-sector patient loads were lowerthan public-sector loads.
Conclusions. US childhood vaccination provider capacity is adequate.Efforts to raise coverage rates should focus on increasing preventivecare use among children, improving the vaccination performanceof providers, and ensuring continuity of care.
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