Questions? Call 888-624-8373

PAPERBACK
list:$21.00
Web:$18.90
add to cart

Rights & Permissions

Free PDF Access

topleft topright

Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization Finance -- Part 1: Summary of the Chicago Workshop (2002)
Institute of Medicine (IOM)

Page
32
bottomleft bottomright

The following HTML text is provided to enhance online readability. Many aspects of typography translate only awkwardly to HTML. Please use the page image as the authoritative form to ensure accuracy.


Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization Finance - Part 1 Summary of the Chicago Workshop

References

CDC. 1997. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1996. MMWR 46(29):657–664.

CDC. 1998. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1997. MMWR 47(26):547–554.

CDC. 2000a. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1998. MMWR 49(SS-9):1–26.

CDC. 2000b. National, state and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1999. MMWR 49(21):585–589.

CDC. 2000c. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 2000. MMWR 50(30):637–643.

CDC. 2001a. Maximum year morbidity rates are drawn from Orenstein, WA, Hinman AR, and Rodewald LE. 1999. Public Health Considerations—United States. In Vaccines, 3rd ed., SA Plotkin and WA Orenstein (eds.) Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders. Current year rates (2000 provisional) provided by private communication, National Immunization Program .

CDC. 2001b. Influenza and pneumococccal vaccination levels among persons aged =65 years—United States, 1999. MMWR 50(25):532–537.


Fairbrother, G, H Kuttner, W Miller, R Hogan, H McPhillips, KA Johnson, and ER Alexander. 2000a. Findings from case studies of state and local immunization programs. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S):54–77.

Fairbrother, G, GL Freed, and JW Thompson. 2000b. Measuring immunization coverage. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S):78–88.

Freed, GL, SJ Clark, and AE Cowan. 2000. State-level perspectives on immunization policies, practices, and program financing in the 1990s. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S):32–44.


Institute of Medicine. 1996. Healthy Communities: New Partnerships for the Future of Public Health. MA Stoto, C Abel, and A Dievler, eds. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

Page
32

Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.
Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.

OCR for page 32
Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization Finance - Part 1 Summary of the Chicago Workshop References CDC. 1997. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1996. MMWR 46(29):657–664. CDC. 1998. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1997. MMWR 47(26):547–554. CDC. 2000a. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1998. MMWR 49(SS-9):1–26. CDC. 2000b. National, state and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 1999. MMWR 49(21):585–589. CDC. 2000c. National, state, and urban area vaccination coverage levels among children aged 19–35 months—United States, 2000. MMWR 50(30):637–643. CDC. 2001a. Maximum year morbidity rates are drawn from Orenstein, WA, Hinman AR, and Rodewald LE. 1999. Public Health Considerations—United States. In Vaccines, 3rd ed., SA Plotkin and WA Orenstein (eds.) Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders. Current year rates (2000 provisional) provided by private communication, National Immunization Program . CDC. 2001b. Influenza and pneumococccal vaccination levels among persons aged =65 years—United States, 1999. MMWR 50(25):532–537. Fairbrother, G, H Kuttner, W Miller, R Hogan, H McPhillips, KA Johnson, and ER Alexander. 2000a. Findings from case studies of state and local immunization programs. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S):54–77. Fairbrother, G, GL Freed, and JW Thompson. 2000b. Measuring immunization coverage. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S):78–88. Freed, GL, SJ Clark, and AE Cowan. 2000. State-level perspectives on immunization policies, practices, and program financing in the 1990s. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S):32–44. Institute of Medicine. 1996. Healthy Communities: New Partnerships for the Future of Public Health. MA Stoto, C Abel, and A Dievler, eds. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

OCR for page 33
Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization Finance - Part 1 Summary of the Chicago Workshop Institute of Medicine. 1997. Improving Health in the Community: A Role for Performance Moni-toring. LA Bailey, JS Durch, and MA Stoto, eds. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. Institute of Medicine. 2000. Calling the Shots: Immunization Finance Policies and Practices. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. Johnson, KA, A Sardell, and B Richards. 2000. Federal immunization policy and funding: A history of responding to crises. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S):99– 112. Rosenthal, J, D Raymond, J Morita, P Diaz, M McCauley, F David, and L Rodewald. 2001. African American children are at risk of a measles outbreak: The Englewood District in Chicago, 2000. Unpublished paper. National Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

OCR for page 34
Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization Finance - Part 1 Summary of the Chicago Workshop This page in the original is blank.

Representative terms from entire chapter:

coverage levels