Judith A. Troy
University of Pittsburgh
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Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2005
Melissa Tabbarah; Richard K. Zimmerman; Mary Patricia Nowalk; Janine E. Janosky; Judith A. Troy; Mahlon Raymund; Ilene Katz Jewell
Objectives: To examine the correlates of repeat influenza vaccination and determine whether there are age‐group (50–64, ≥65) differences in decision‐making behavior.
Vaccine | 2014
Richard K. Zimmerman; Mary Patricia Nowalk; Chyongchiou Jeng Lin; Kristin Hannibal; Krissy K. Moehling; Hsin-Hui Huang; Annamore Matambanadzo; Judith A. Troy; Norma J. Allred; Greg Gallik; Evelyn Cohen Reis
PURPOSE To increase childhood influenza vaccination rates using a toolkit and early vaccine delivery in a randomized cluster trial. METHODS Twenty primary care practices treating children (range for n=536-8183) were randomly assigned to Intervention and Control arms to test the effectiveness of an evidence-based practice improvement toolkit (4 Pillars Toolkit) and early vaccine supplies for use among disadvantaged children on influenza vaccination rates among children 6 months-18 years. Follow-up staff meetings and surveys were used to assess use and acceptability of the intervention strategies in the Intervention arm. Rates for the 2010-2011 and 2011-2012 influenza seasons were compared. Two-level generalized linear mixed modeling was used to evaluate outcomes. RESULTS Overall increases in influenza vaccination rates were significantly greater in the Intervention arm (7.9 percentage points) compared with the Control arm (4.4 percentage points; P<0.034). These rate changes represent 4522 additional doses in the Intervention arm vs. 1390 additional doses in the Control arm. This effect of the intervention was observed despite the fact that rates increased significantly in both arms - 8/10 Intervention (all P<0.001) and 7/10 Control sites (P-values=0.04 to <0.001). Rates in two Intervention sites with pre-intervention vaccination rates >58% did not significantly increase. In regression analyses, a childs likelihood of being vaccinated was significantly higher with: younger age, white race (Odds ratio [OR]=1.29; 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.23-1.34), having commercial insurance (OR=1.30; 95%CI=1.25-1.35), higher pre-intervention practice vaccination rate (OR=1.25; 95%CI=1.16-1.34), and being in the Intervention arm (OR=1.23; 95%CI=1.01-1.50). Early delivery of influenza vaccine was rated by Intervention practices as an effective strategy for raising rates. CONCLUSIONS Implementation of a multi-strategy toolkit and early vaccine supplies can significantly improve influenza vaccination rates among children in primary care practices but the effect may be less pronounced in practices with moderate to high existing vaccination rates. Clinical trial registry name/number: From Innovation to Solutions: Childhood Influenza/NCT01664793.
BMC Public Health | 2006
Richard K. Zimmerman; Melissa Tabbarah; Janine E. Janosky; Barbara Bardenheier; Judith A. Troy; Ilene Katz Jewell; Barbara P. Yawn
BackgroundThe Vaccines for Children (VFC) Program is a major vaccine entitlement program with limited long-term evaluation. The objectives of this study are to evaluate the effect of VFC on physician reported referral of children to public health clinics and on doses administered in the public sector.MethodsMinnesota and Pennsylvania primary care physicians (n = 164), completed surveys before (e.g., 1993) and after (2003) VFC, rating their likelihood on a scale of 0 (very unlikely) to 10 (very likely) of referring a child to the health department for immunization.ResultsThe percentage of respondents likely to refer was 60% for an uninsured child, 14% for a child with Medicaid, and 3% for a child with insurance that pays for immunization. Half (55%) of the physicians who did not participate in VFC were likely to refer a Medicaid-insured child, as compared with 6% of those who participated (P < 0.001). Physician likelihood to refer an uninsured child for vaccination, measured on a scale of 0 to 10 where 10 is very likely, decreased by a mean difference of 1.9 (P < 0.001) from pre- to post-VFC. The likelihood to refer a Medicaid-insured child decreased by a mean of 1.2 (P = 0.001).ConclusionReported out-referral to public clinics decreased over time. In light of increasing immunizations rates, this suggests that more vaccines were being administered in private provider offices.
Primary Care | 2011
Donald B. Middleton; Richard K. Zimmerman; Judith A. Troy; Robert M. Wolfe
This article presents sources of information for those in practice, administration, or education to stay up-to-date in vaccine recommendations. Web-based repositories predominate in the provision of information. Other sources include newsletters, conferences, journals, expert opinion, community organizations, and books. The promise of the electronic health record remains unfulfilled but improving.
Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2005
Richard K. Zimmerman; Robert M. Wolfe; Dwight E. Fox; Jake R. Fox; Mary Patricia Nowalk; Judith A. Troy; Lisa K. Sharp
The American Journal of Managed Care | 2005
Mary Patricia Nowalk; Chyongchiou J. Lin; Richard K. Zimmerman; Judith A. Troy; Alejandro Hoberman; Diana H. Kearney; Stephanie M. Cleary
Family Medicine | 2007
Mary Patricia Nowalk; Richard K. Zimmerman; Middleton Db; Sherwood Ra; Ko Fs; Kimmel; Judith A. Troy
Preventive Medicine | 2005
Richard K. Zimmerman; Melissa Tabbarah; Barbara Bardenheier; Janine E. Janosky; Judith A. Troy; Mahlon Raymund; Barbara P. Yawn
Family Medicine | 2003
Mary Patricia Nowalk; Richard K. Zimmerman; Kimmel; Bower Dj; Middleton Db; Sherwood Ra; Judith A. Troy
Archive | 2012
Mary Patricia Nowalk; C. Randall Clinch; Derjung M. Tarn; Tammy Chang; Collette N. Ncube; Judith A. Troy; Richard K. Zimmerman