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To assess the cost-effectiveness of a cue to influenza vaccination provided by community pharmacists, a decision tree was constructed of the consequences of implementing a pharmacy-based vaccine-advocacy program, based on experience gained in an experiment involving three community pharmacies in Durham County, North Carolina. The model used morbidity and mortality assumptions derived from the infectious-disease literature and cost assumptions based on 1990-91 Medicare Part A and Part B reimbursement costs. This analysis suggests that if Medicare reimbursed pharmacists for advising 100, 000 patients at risk to accept influenza vaccine through vaccine-advocacy messages, for an apparent expenditure of 110, 000, the increased rate of influenza vaccinations would avert 139 hospitalizations and 63 deaths, and actually yield Medicare a net savings of 280, 588. These calculations probably underestimate the benefit to society of a pharmacy-based vaccine-advocacy program, because only direct costs to the single government agency were computed and no cost was attributed to death or lost earnings.
Grabenstein et al. (Mon,) studied this question.