Published in Pawtucket Times on January 5, 2004
During last year’s legislative session, the Ocean State Adult Immunization Coalition (OSAIC) approached the Rhode Island General Assembly for funding to promote the group’s efforts to get the word out about the importance of Rhode Island seniors getting influenza and pneumococcal vaccinations.
OSAIC’s message was quite simple – “Avoid a Hospital Stay: Get Your Flu Shot Now!”
The Providence-based nonprofit, a coalition of 40 agencies including hospitals, nursing facilities, vaccine manufacturers, medical societies, managed care groups, the R.I. Department of Health, the R.I. Health Care Association, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of R.I., call vaccinations a cost-effective way to prevent these unnecessary hospitalizations and deaths.
According OSAIC, pneumonia and influenza deaths together are considered the sixth-leading cause of death in the nation. Since 1999, when this initiative began, there have been more than 300 deaths and 6,800 hospitalizations that were attributed to influenza and pneumococcal diseases in the Ocean State.
OSAIC stated that the cost of a flu shot is $ 15 and a pneumonia shot is $ 30.
On the other hand, the average length of stay for an older person with influenza is five days, costing $ 12,000. Treatment in a hospital for pneumonia lasts six days and costs $ 12,000l
At the conclusion of last year’s General Assembly session, lawmakers allocated $ 50,000 to OSAIC to push its many immunization initiatives. Charles Harris, owner of Harris Health Centers and an OSAIC executive board member, noted last year’s funding enabled his group to work closely with providers to create a system to identify vaccine recipients.
“We also were able to assist the state’s Health Department to expand the statewide vaccine record system,” he said.
OSAIC also worked with managed care providers to assist them in informing their beneficiaries through newsletters and reminders about the many benefits of flue and pneumonia vaccinates,” Harris added.
Furthermore, Harris said OSAIC reached out to the state’s media outlets to educate Ocean State seniors as to the importance of vaccine shots and the locations where they could get those shots. Meanwhile, an outreach program, utilizing both providers and pharmacists, also encouraged older Rhode Islanders to get their shots.
To get the facts out, OSAIC senior volunteers even managed the nonprofit’s group’s flue hot line.
“Last year’s funding appropriation has even allowed us to begin our work this spring to urge seniors to get their pneumonia vaccines,” Harris noted.
“It also enabled OSAIC to bring its message into the state’s nursing facilities. Most nursing facility residents or staff who requested a shot got one, even with the flue vaccine shortage,” he said.
OSAIC is now posed to ratchet up its efforts to protect more of the state’s seniors. Look for the nonprofit group to push for making vaccinations a standard of care, Harris told All About Seniors.
“Rhode Island’s age 65 and over uninsured should receive these inoculations either free or at a nominal cost,” Harris said.
Senate Finance Committee Chair Stephen D. Alves, and Rep. Stephen M. Constantino (D-Providence), who serves as vice chair of the House Finance Committee, were key in getting OSAIC’s $ 50,000 funding allocation last year.
When the 2004 legislative session kicks off this columnist hopes that Sen. Alves and Rep. Costantino will again bring their passion for this preventative care issue to their respective committees and to the House and Senate floors during budget debates.
Even with a huge budget deficient looming, Gov. Don Carcieri and state lawmakers must see that preventative medicine is a worthy cost containment approach for reining in skyrocketing health care costs. Even with state dollars allocated up front, the savings will be ultimately realized down the road.
If Gov. Carcieri and state lawmakers choose to act “penny-wise” but pound-foolish” Rhode Islanders taxpayers will ultimately become the losers in the upcoming legislative session.