TY - JOUR
T1 - Child Influenza Vaccination and Adult Work Loss
T2 - Reduced Sick Leave Use Only in Adults With Paid Sick Leave
AU - Bleser, William K.
AU - Miranda, Patricia Y.
AU - Salmon, Daniel A.
N1 - Funding Information:
William K. Bleser discloses consulting fees from Merck unrelated to this research. Daniel A. Salmon discloses consulting fees and research grants from Merck, Pfizer, and Walgreens unrelated to this research. No other financial disclosures were reported.
Funding Information:
The authors would like to make several acknowledgments. First, we acknowledge Rhonda BeLue, Steven A. Haas, and Marianne H. Hillemeier from Pennsylvania State University for helping to progress earlier versions of this work. Second, we acknowledge Pennsylvania State University's Department of Health Policy and Administration, Demography program, and Population Research Institute for supporting this research. The Population Research Institute is supported by an infrastructure grant from NIH (2R24HD041025-11). Third, we acknowledge Negasi Beyene of the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), and Emily Greenman, and Mark Roberts of the Penn State Federal Statistical Research Data Center (RDC) for helping to review proposals and access restricted data from a related project used to inform this work. Data collection for the National Health Interview Survey, analyzed in this work, was approved by the NCHS Research Ethics Review Board (ERB). Analysis of de-identified data from the survey is exempt from the federal regulations for the protection of human research participants. Analysis of restricted data through the NCHS Research Data Center is also approved by the NCHS ERB. The findings and conclusions in this research are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the RDC, the NCHS, or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2019/2
Y1 - 2019/2
N2 - Introduction: Children are a population of interest for influenza. They are at increased risk for severe influenza, comprise a substantial portion of influenza morbidity, and significantly contribute to its transmission in the household and subsequent parental work loss. The association between influenza vaccination and work loss prevention, however, has rarely been studied, and the sparse existing literature has very limited generalizability to U.S. adults, thus requiring better characterization. Methods: Using pooled National Health Interview Survey data (2013–2015, analyses conducted in 2018) nationally representative of working U.S. adults with household children (n=23,014), zero-inflated negative binomial regression examined the association of child influenza vaccination (exposure) with sick days (outcome) stratified by paid sick leave (no: n=10,741, yes: n=12,273). Results: Child influenza vaccination was associated with significantly lower sick day usage, but only among adults with paid sick leave (prevalence rate ratio=0.79, 95% CI=0.67, 0.93), equating to average annual sick days of 4.07 vs 3.29 in adults with unvaccinated versus vaccinated household children (difference=0.78 fewer days annually). Conclusions: Influenza vaccination of children is associated with reduced sick leave in household adults, helping to keep the workforce healthy and reduce influenza's costly annual economic burden. This only occurred among adults with paid sick leave, however, which is distributed inequitably by income, education, gender, occupation, and race/ethnicity. Health in All Policies considers downstream health effects of social and economic policy; the failure of federal policy to ensure paid sick leave likely contributes to propagating influenza and health inequities.
AB - Introduction: Children are a population of interest for influenza. They are at increased risk for severe influenza, comprise a substantial portion of influenza morbidity, and significantly contribute to its transmission in the household and subsequent parental work loss. The association between influenza vaccination and work loss prevention, however, has rarely been studied, and the sparse existing literature has very limited generalizability to U.S. adults, thus requiring better characterization. Methods: Using pooled National Health Interview Survey data (2013–2015, analyses conducted in 2018) nationally representative of working U.S. adults with household children (n=23,014), zero-inflated negative binomial regression examined the association of child influenza vaccination (exposure) with sick days (outcome) stratified by paid sick leave (no: n=10,741, yes: n=12,273). Results: Child influenza vaccination was associated with significantly lower sick day usage, but only among adults with paid sick leave (prevalence rate ratio=0.79, 95% CI=0.67, 0.93), equating to average annual sick days of 4.07 vs 3.29 in adults with unvaccinated versus vaccinated household children (difference=0.78 fewer days annually). Conclusions: Influenza vaccination of children is associated with reduced sick leave in household adults, helping to keep the workforce healthy and reduce influenza's costly annual economic burden. This only occurred among adults with paid sick leave, however, which is distributed inequitably by income, education, gender, occupation, and race/ethnicity. Health in All Policies considers downstream health effects of social and economic policy; the failure of federal policy to ensure paid sick leave likely contributes to propagating influenza and health inequities.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.amepre.2018.09.013
DO - 10.1016/j.amepre.2018.09.013
M3 - Article
C2 - 30573337
AN - SCOPUS:85060044896
SN - 0749-3797
VL - 56
SP - 251
EP - 261
JO - American journal of preventive medicine
JF - American journal of preventive medicine
IS - 2
ER -