AI Article Synopsis

  • Digital letter interventions effectively increased influenza vaccination rates among Danish citizens aged 65 and older during the 2023-2024 flu season through a randomized trial.
  • Participants were divided into groups receiving usual care or various behaviorally informed electronic nudges before vaccination, revealing higher rates of vaccination in the nudge group compared to usual care (76.32% vs. 76.02%).
  • The nudges helped particularly those who were unvaccinated in the previous season, with consistent effects observed across different years, highlighting their scalability and potential for future flu seasons.

Article Abstract

Digital letter interventions have proven effective in increasing influenza vaccination rates. In this trial, we sought to further refine these strategies and investigated whether the effectiveness of the strategies could be sustained across consecutive influenza seasons. We enrolled all eligible Danish citizens 65 years of age or older in a nationwide registry-based randomized implementation trial during the 2023-2024 influenza season. Households of participants were randomly assigned in a 2.45:1:1:1:1:1:1 ratio to usual care or six different behaviorally informed electronic letter-based nudges delivered before the influenza vaccination period. The primary endpoint was receipt of influenza vaccination. Statistical analyses accounted for household-level clustering. A total of 881,373 participants (mean age 74.1 ± 6.5 years, 52.1% female) were randomized across 649,487 households. The primary endpoint was met; influenza vaccination rates were higher in the pooled intervention letter group compared to usual care (76.32% versus 76.02%; difference, 0.31 percentage points; 99.29% confidence interval, 0.00-0.61; P = 0.007). Although no individual letter significantly increased influenza vaccination rates, the directionality of effect was consistent across all letters. Effectiveness was particularly pronounced in participants who had not received influenza vaccination during the preceding season (P = 0.010). Effectiveness was consistent regardless of whether participants had received a similar electronic letter-based nudge in the preceding season (P = 0.26). In summary, electronic letter-based nudges successfully increased influenza vaccination among older adults, and our results suggest that these highly scalable strategies can be implemented effectively and safely across consecutive vaccination seasons.ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT06030726 .

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-024-03202-4DOI Listing

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