Preventive Medicine Reports (Sep 2024)

Closing the gaps in adolescent vaccinations: Rhode Island’s Vaccinate Before You Graduate program as a model for other jurisdictions

  • Dora M. Dumont,
  • Jennifer S. Levy,
  • Lisa M. Gargano,
  • Jordan C. White

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45
p. 102837

Abstract

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Objective: The northeastern state of Rhode Island (RI) has a Vaccinate Before You Graduate (VBYG) program that supplements the traditional primary care infrastructure by providing vaccines to adolescents while they are in school, with no out-of-pocket expenses. We analyzed data from RI’s immunization registry to evaluate whether VBYG also reduces disparities in adolescent immunization rates. Methods: We identified adolescent and catch-up vaccines administered in RI to people who were aged 11–18 at any point during the 5-year study period of 2019–2023, and conducted bivariate and multivariate analyses of vaccine administration data by setting (VBYG clinics, community health centers [CHCs], all other primary care practices [oPCPs], other school-based clinics, and other sites) and adolescent demographics (racial and ethnic identity, insurance status, sex, and age at time of vaccine). Results: Of over 387,000 routine vaccines administered during the study period, 3.3 % were administered by a VBYG clinic despite significant declines during school closures associated with the early COVID-19 pandemic. VBYG-administered doses went to slightly older youth, and a higher proportion were catch-up doses (25.7 % versus 14.1 % for CHC doses and 6.5 % for oPCP). Youths received an average of 2.71 vaccines in VBYG clinics compared to 1.77 from oPCPs and 2.08 from CHCs. A higher proportion of vaccines administered by VBYG went to adolescents of color and those without private insurance than those administered by oPCPs. Conclusions: VBYG provides a model to other jurisdictions of a vaccine safety net for adolescents who may not otherwise receive recommended vaccines before exiting the school system.

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