Wake Technical Community College, Department of Emergency Medical Science, Raleigh, North Carolina.
West J Emerg Med. 2021 Oct 26;22(6):1317-1325. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2021.7.50681.
Because of their frequent contact with compromised patients, vaccination against influenza is recommended for all healthcare workers. Recent studies suggest that vaccination decreases influenza transmission to patients and reduces worker illness and absenteeism. However, few emergency medical services (EMS) agencies provide annual vaccination, and the vaccination rate among EMS personnel remains low. Reticence among EMS agencies to provide influenza vaccination to their employees may be due in part to the unknown fiscal consequences of implementing a vaccination program. In this study, we sought to estimate the cost effectiveness of an employer-provided influenza vaccination program for EMS personnel.
Using data from published reports on influenza vaccination, we developed a cost-effectiveness model of vaccination for a hypothesized EMS system of 100 employees. Model inputs included vaccination costs, vaccination rate, infection rate, costs associated with absenteeism, lost productivity due to working while ill (presenteeism), and medical care for treating illness. To assess the robustness of the model we performed a series of sensitivity analyses on the input variables.
The proportion of employees contracting influenza or influenza-like illness (ILI) was estimated at 19% among vaccinated employees compared to 26% among non-vaccinated employees. The costs of the vaccine, consumables, and employee time for vaccination totaled $44.19 per vaccinated employee, with a total system cost of $4,419. Compared to no vaccination, a mandatory vaccination program would save $20,745 in lost productivity and medical costs, or $16,325 in net savings after accounting for vaccination costs. The savings were 3.7 times the cost of the vaccination program and were derived from avoided absenteeism ($7,988), avoided presenteeism productivity losses ($10,303), and avoided medical costs of treating employees with influenza/ILI ($2,454). Through sensitivity analyses the model was verified to be robust across a wide range of input variable assumptions. The net monetary benefits were positive across all ranges of input assumptions, but cost savings were most sensitive to the vaccination uptake rate, ILI rate, and presenteeism productivity losses.
This cost-effectiveness analysis suggests that an employer-provided influenza vaccination program is a financially favorable strategy for reducing costs associated with influenza/ILI employee absenteeism, presenteeism, and medical care.
由于医护人员经常接触到病情不稳定的患者,因此建议所有医护人员都接种流感疫苗。最近的研究表明,接种疫苗可降低流感在患者中的传播,并减少工作人员患病和缺勤的情况。然而,很少有紧急医疗服务(EMS)机构提供年度疫苗接种,EMS 人员的接种率仍然很低。EMS 机构对为员工提供流感疫苗犹豫不决,部分原因可能是实施疫苗接种计划的未知财政后果。在这项研究中,我们试图评估雇主为 EMS 员工提供流感疫苗接种的成本效益。
我们使用已发表的流感疫苗接种报告中的数据,为一个假设的拥有 100 名员工的 EMS 系统开发了疫苗接种成本效益模型。模型输入包括疫苗接种成本、接种率、感染率、因缺勤而产生的相关成本、因病缺勤导致的生产力损失(旷工)以及治疗疾病的医疗费用。为了评估模型的稳健性,我们对输入变量进行了一系列敏感性分析。
接种疫苗的员工中,患流感或流感样疾病(ILI)的比例估计为 19%,而未接种疫苗的员工中这一比例为 26%。疫苗、耗材和员工接种疫苗的时间总成本为每位接种疫苗的员工 44.19 美元,系统总成本为 4419 美元。与不接种疫苗相比,强制接种疫苗方案将节省 20745 美元的生产力损失和医疗费用,或在计入疫苗接种成本后节省 16325 美元的净收益。节省额是疫苗接种计划成本的 3.7 倍,来自避免缺勤(7988 美元)、避免旷工生产力损失(10303 美元)和避免治疗流感/ILI 员工的医疗费用(2454 美元)。通过敏感性分析,该模型在广泛的输入变量假设范围内得到了验证。在所有输入假设范围内,净货币收益均为正值,但成本节省对疫苗接种率、ILI 率和旷工生产力损失最为敏感。
这项成本效益分析表明,雇主提供流感疫苗接种计划是一种降低与流感/ILI 员工缺勤、旷工和医疗费用相关成本的有利策略。