For weekly vaccination analyses, we defined weeks as starting on Mondays and ending on Sundays (according to the International Organization for Standardization code ISO-8601) and used EpochConverter (www.epochconverter.com) to assign week counts. For weekly analyses, we calculated the number of children and adults vaccinated in each week and
the cumulative total percentage of all patients vaccinated by the end of each week. We investigated seasonal influenza vaccination Selleck CAL101 trends separately for children and adults. The trends were stratified by patient age categories (6 to 23 months; 2 to 4 years; 5 to 8 years, and 9 to 17 years for children and 18 to 49 years and 50 to 64 years for adults), regions, number of outpatient office visits,
and the type of vaccine. We calculated age at time of vaccination for patients who were vaccinated. For patients who were not vaccinated, the median date of vaccination during that season, based on patients who were vaccinated, was used. For the numerator of vaccination events, we plotted weekly vaccination counts and recorded weeks at which half of SB203580 molecular weight all patients were vaccinated. Because the size of the analyzed population was extremely large, the widths of the confidence intervals for the vaccination rate percent estimates by influenza season, class of age, region, and type of vaccine were Modulators always lower than ±1%; therefore any difference greater than 2% is statistically significant. For seasonal analyses, the eligible analysis population ranged between 1144,098 and 1245,487 for children and 3931,622 and 4158,223 for adults. The total number of vaccinated patients ranged from 198,324 to 312,373 for children and 342,315 to 516,650 for adults. During the five influenza seasons, seasonal influenza vaccination rates medroxyprogesterone in commercially insured children 6 months to 17 years of age increased from 16.5% in the 2007–2008 season
to 25.4% in the 2011–2012 season. The frequency of vaccination decreased with advancing age in children, but this trend was reversed in adults. Children 6 to 23 months of age had the highest likelihood of vaccination against influenza (47–55%; Fig. 1A). Adults 50 to 64 years of age were more likely to be vaccinated than those 18 to 49 years of age (15–19% versus 5–9%, respectively; Fig. 1B). In all age groups, the vaccination rates steadily increased from 2007–2008 through 2009–2010 season and then reached a plateau, with a slight decrease in the 2011–2012 influenza season (Fig. 1A and B). With respect to geography, children in the Northeast had the highest vaccination rates (20%–30%), whereas children in the West had the lowest (14–24%; Fig. 2A). Similar regional differences were observed with adult vaccination rates, which ranged from 5% to 18% (Fig. 2B). The regional differences for all ages varied by 6 to 8 percentage points.