Increasing immunization compliance among schools and day care centers: Evidence from a randomized controlled trial

Authors

  • Jessica Leight American University & Office of Evaluation Services
  • Elana Safran Office of Evaluation Sciences

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30636/jbpa.22.55

Keywords:

Immunization compliance, School immunization policy, Social norms

Abstract

This paper reports on the results of a randomized controlled trial in which researchers collaborated with a department of health in a mid-size city to evaluate the effectiveness of targeted communications highlighting descriptive social norms to increase immunization compliance across 700 schools. Schools were randomly selected to receive a twice-annual immunization compliance report card reporting in detail their compliance rates compared to other schools of the same school type; the comparison rates reported included the school-type average, average compliance among the top 10% of performers, and the city target of 98% compliance. Shifts in immunization compliance are tracked in a city-wide administrative vaccine registry. The results suggest that there was no significant difference in compliance rates between treatment and control schools six months post-treatment. To our knowledge, it is the first randomized controlled trial evaluating the use of descriptive social norms in increasing immunization compliance rates in a school-based setting. In addition, it serves as an example of embedding a behaviorally-informed experiment in a government program utilizing high-quality administrative data.

Additional Files

Published

2019-06-05

Issue

Section

Symposium on the Use of Social Norms in Public Administration

How to Cite

Increasing immunization compliance among schools and day care centers: Evidence from a randomized controlled trial. (2019). Journal of Behavioral Public Administration, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.30636/jbpa.22.55