Reducing Disparities in Vaccination Rates Between Different Racial/Ethnic and Socioeconomic Groups- The Potential of Community-based Multilevel Interventions
There are well-documented disparities in vaccination rates between different socioeconomic
and racial/ethnic groups in the United States. These disparities persist in spite of an overall
increase in vaccination rates during the last decade and the implementation of several interventions
that have aimed to increase vaccination rates in disadvantaged groups. Although many interventions
are efficacious at improving vaccination rates under trial conditions, these interventions
when extended to the general population frequently do not appreciably improve its health. Explanations
for this limited intervention efficiency include poor adherence to protocols in real life
versus idealized trial situations, changes in baseline so that the trial conditions are no longer replicable,
and the contribution of other community-level factors that make it difficult to extend the
trial methods to other communities. Multilevel community intervention trials recognize and address
the multiple competing forces that shape the health of the population in cities and have the
potential to increase vaccination rates among minorities and marginalized groups.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40332/2/Galea_Reducing Disparities in Vaccination Rates Between_2005.pd