At a glance
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A Quality Improvement Study to Improve Pneumococcal Vaccination Rates Through Targeted Health Education for Patients in an Ambulatory Pre-surgical Testing Setting
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Focused Health Education for Community Acquired Pneumonia. Completed, enrolled 2,509 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The purpose of this quality improvement project is to improve the immunization rates of an at-risk adult population seen in an ambulatory healthcare environment, through the use of targeted health education messages regarding pneumococcal immunization. Patients seen in an out-patient pre-surgical testing center will receive 1) a one-page written information sheet that outlines the benefits of pneumococcal immunization and 2) verbal reinforcement of this message, provided by the clinical staff, during the patient's interview. At-risk adult patients (as defined by Centers for Disease Control) seen in an ambulatory healthcare environment (a pre-surgical testing center) will receive a one page, "gain-framed" message that emphasizes the benefits of pneumococcal vaccinations. This educational material will be reviewed and reinforced by clinical staff during the assessment phase of the clinical visit. Among this group, there will be increased vaccination rate compared with at-risk adult patients who did not receive this communication (prospective vs retrospective data).
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
A two-phase quality improvement study was designed to modify staff and patient behaviors. The project incorporated evidence-based strategies of staff education, feedback and incentives for performance and patient education. The staff received monthly feedback on departmental immunization rates, and incentives for performance. A one-page patient education flyer, written at 3rd grade reading level, was added to encourage patients to inquire about it.