Abstract

* Abbreviations: ACIP — : Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices CDC — : Centers for Disease Control and Prevention SLV — : school-located vaccination As the preceding articles indicate, school-located vaccination (SLV) shows great promise as a method to quickly and efficiently vaccinate large numbers of school-aged children against influenza. This approach can both relieve health care providers who lack sufficient capacity to effectively vaccinate their patients annually, in accordance with the 2008 recommendations of Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP),1 as well as provide a convenient option for parents and an opportunity for children without a medical home to be vaccinated. Importantly, SLV may be appropriate for routine vaccination against seasonal influenza, as well as during a public health emergency or pandemic. The utility of SLV was demonstrated on a large scale in response to the 2009–2010 H1N1 influenza pandemic. In July 2009, intense efforts were underway to procure H1N1 vaccine and prepare for implementing a large-scale national vaccination program. At that time, the ACIP published recommendations that defined the highest-priority target groups to receive vaccine when it first became available, which included school-aged children.2 Accordingly, public health units, educational institutions, and others in local communities joined together to hold SLV clinics throughout the United States, with several states implementing SLV statewide. Based on a National Association of County and City Health Officials survey of local health department officials that was conducted in the summer of 2010, an estimated 85% of local health departments held at least 1 H1N1 influenza SLV clinic in their jurisdiction (National Association of County and City Health Officials, unpublished data). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National 2009 H1N1 Flu Survey is a nationally representative telephone-based survey designed to collect vaccination coverage from US … Address correspondence to Tara M. Vogt, PhD, MPH, 1600 Clifton Rd NE, MS A19, Atlanta, GA 30333. E-mail: tcv3{at}cdc.gov

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