Project
Goals and Objectives
- Identify local barriers to vaccine acceptance among older low-income, ethnically diverse residents in senior housing facilities.
- Integrate the results of this research into an already-developed, peer-led approach to improving flu vaccine uptake based on theories of empowerment, social influence, and self-regulation.
- Test the efficacy of the intervention in one senior housing site against a matched control building.
- Finalize the model and develop a manual for expanding the intervention into additional sites.
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Project Details
In the intervention building, project staff engage volunteer residents who constitute the V.I.P. Committee in an empowerment-based training program in which they will learn about influenza, flu prevention and vaccination importance. Residents learn to converse with other building residents about these topics and plan and conduct a flu campaign, consisting of a number of different events, and two flu clinics. A flu clinic is held in the comparison building, to assess vaccine acceptance without the intervention.
Representatives of each collaborating organization form the Flu Strategic Alliance, meeting regularly to provide guidance in the overall implementation of the study and the dissemination of results. By contrasting pre and post program results in the intervention and control buildings, the study team will determine whether the intervention has improved flu vaccine attitudes, knowledge, beliefs and acceptance. Sustainability of the intervention approach will be determined by assessing the capacity of the V.I.P. committee to plan and implement flu vaccination events and flu clinics with minimal outside support the following year. Results of the V.I.P. program will inform the development of an intervention model that can be expanded successfully to additional senior housing buildings. This model will use a design that empowers older adults with limited incomes to promote proactive influenza vaccination acceptability, disease prevention, and other health maintenance activities.
This project resulted in a curriculum that was tested in a CDC funded efficacy study, "Vaccinate for Prevention: Increasing flu vaccination acceptance among undervaccinated minority and low income residents of senior housing."
Project Findings
Poster presentation (pdf) |
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Project
Contact:
Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D.
Principal Investigator
Kim E. Radda, R.N., ABD
Project Director
Project Staff:
ICR
Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D.
Principal Investigator
Kim Radda, RN, MA.
Project Director
William Disch, Ph.D.
Senior Data Analyst
Elsie Vazquez, BA.
Intervention Facilitator
Ken Williamson, Ph.D.
Intervention Scientist
Michelle Garner, BA
Data Manager
University of Connecticut Health Center, Center on Aging
George Kuchel, M.D., FRCP
UCHC Principal Investigator
Rita Jepson, M.D.
Co-Investigator
Assistant Professor, UCHC
Allison Kleppinger, MS
Research Assistant
Jan McElhaney, M.D.
Consultant
Hartford Housing Authority
Elizabeth Rodriguez
Wanda Moore
VNA Health Care Inc. of Greater Hartford
Laurie St. John, R.N., M.S.N.
North Central Area Agency on Aging (NCAAA)
Carmen Y. Reyes, M.S.M.
Laurie Brooks
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