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Suggested Citation:"References." Institute of Medicine. 2003. Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization: Part 3: Summary of the Los Angeles Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10607.
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References

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 2001. Influenza and pneumococcal vaccination levels among persons aged =65 years—United States, 1999. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 50(25): 532–537.

CDC. 2002a. Summary of notifiable diseases—United States, 2000. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 49(53): 1-102.

CDC. 2002b. Prevention and control of influenza: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 51(RRO3): 1– 31.


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

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

Freed GL, Clark SJ, Cowan AE. 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 (IOM). 1996. Healthy Communities: New Partnerships for the Future of Public Health. Stoto MA, Abel C, Dievler A, eds. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

IOM. 1997. Improving Health in the Community: A Role for Performance Monitoring. Durch JS, Bailey LA, Stoto MA, eds. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

IOM. 2000. Calling the Shots: Immunization Finance Policies and Practices. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

IOM. 2002a. Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization. Part 1, Summary of the Chicago Workshop. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

IOM. 2002b. Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization.Part 2, Summary of the Austin Workshop. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

Suggested Citation:"References." Institute of Medicine. 2003. Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization: Part 3: Summary of the Los Angeles Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10607.
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Johnson KA, Sardell A, Richards B. 2000. Federal immunization policy and funding: A history of responding to crises. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S): 99–112.


Kenyon TA, Martuck MA, Stroh G. 1998. Persistent low immunization coverage among inner-city preschool children despite access to free vaccine. Pediatrics 101(4 Pt 1): 612– 616.


Roper WL. 2000. Breaking the “immunization cycle.” American Journal of Preventive Medicine 19(3S): 113–114.


U.S. General Accounting Office. 1996. CDC’s National Immunization Survey: Methodological Problems Limit Survey’s Utility. Washington, DC: U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO/PEMD–96–16.


Wood D, Halfon N, Donald-Sherbourne C, Mazel RM, Schuster M, Hamlin JS, Pereyra M, Camp P, Grabowsky M, Duan N. 1998. Increasing immunization rates among inner-city, African American children. Journal of the American Medical Association 279(1): 29– 34.

Suggested Citation:"References." Institute of Medicine. 2003. Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization: Part 3: Summary of the Los Angeles Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10607.
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Page 43
Suggested Citation:"References." Institute of Medicine. 2003. Setting the Course: A Strategic Vision for Immunization: Part 3: Summary of the Los Angeles Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10607.
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Page 44
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Immunization is essential to disease prevention efforts in public health, but the nation's immunization system faces financing challenges that are affecting the delivery of services. A 2000 report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM), Calling the Shots: Immunization Finance Policies and Practices (IOM, 2000), pointed to the instability of the fundamental infrastructure that supports immunization programs throughout the United States, including unpredictable federal funding levels, growing financial burdens and operational complexities in immunization services, shortcomings in public- and private-sector investments in vaccine purchases and immunization programs, and fluctuations in coverage plans in the public and private health care sectors that create uncertainties regarding vaccine purchase and service delivery arrangements. In January 2002, health officials, public health experts, health care providers, health plan representatives, health care purchasers, and community leaders met at the University of California at Los Angeles to explore the implications of the IOM findings and recommendations for California in general and for Los Angeles and San Diego County in particular. The one-day workshop was the third in a series of four meetings organized by IOM with support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to foster informed discussions about challenges for immunization finance and future financing strategies for immunization activities and the public health infrastructure that supports those activities.

This report of the Los Angeles workshop summarizes the findings of the IOM study, reviews progress in responding to the IOM recommendations at the federal level, and highlights continuing challenges in immunization finance for the nation and at the state and local levels in California.

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