Vaccines for Children: Major Implementation Hurdles Remain (Testimony,
07/21/94, GAO/T-PEMD-94-29).
The Vaccines for Children program was authorized by Congress in 1993 in
order to increase immunization rates through free vaccinations. Plans by
the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to implement the program by
October 1, as required by law, appear to be lagging behind schedule.
With little margin for error, the program may not be up and running on
time. GAO examined CDC's implementation plans and concluded that the
time line is very ambitious. Several tasks integral to full
implementation of the program are experiencing delays, including
awarding contracts to vaccine manufacturers, developing plans for
provider enrollment, and designing a vaccine distribution service that
ensures the vaccine will not lose potency during shipment. Other
components of the plan may need revision; for example, a proposed
administration fee schedule may impose a financial burden on some
program recipients, a consequence inconsistent with the program's stated
goal of removing cost as a barrier to immunization. GAO also expressed
concern that CDC has not yet developed plans for evaluating the program;
without evaluation steps, it will be difficult to measure the impact of
the program on immunization rates.
--------------------------- Indexing Terms -----------------------------
REPORTNUM: T-PEMD-94-29
TITLE: Vaccines for Children: Major Implementation Hurdles Remain
DATE: 07/21/94
SUBJECT: Immunization programs
Immunization services
Community health services
Contract negotiations
Federal/state relations
Infectious diseases
Children
Program evaluation
Physicians
Human resources training
IDENTIFIER: CDC Children's Immunization Initiative
CDC Vaccines for Children Program
Medicaid Program
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