Michael Chaney
5 Papers
131 Citations
Michael Chaney is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Jurisdiction. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Impact of measurement and feedback on vaccination coverage in public clinics, 1988-1994.
Charles W. LeBaron,Michael Chaney,Andrew L. Baughman,Eugene F. Dini,Edmond F. Maes,Vance Dietz,Roger H. Bernier +6 more
TL;DR: A marked increase in vaccination coverage occurred in Georgia public clinics associated with a program of annual measurement and feedback, suggesting that the rise in coverage inGeorgia public clinics exceeded national trends.
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The Impact of Interventions by a Community-Based Organization on Inner-city Vaccination Coverage: Fulton County, Georgia, 1992-1993
TL;DR: Reminder-recall activities by the community-based organization improved vaccination rates in intervention clinics compared with control clinics, and a statistically significant impact on vaccination rates could not be detected for residence-based interventions by thecommunity-based organizations.
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Information as intervention: how Georgia used vaccination coverage data to double public sector vaccination coverage in seven years.
TL;DR: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has summarized the Georgia system with the acronym AFIX--Assessment, Feedback, Incentives, eXchange of information--and recommends that all state immunization program managers test and adapt this methodology.
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The Impact of Interventions by a Community-Based Organization on Inner-city Vaccination Coverage
Fulton County,Charles W. LeBaron,Debi Starnes,Eugene F. Dini,Julie W. Chambliss,Michael Chaney +5 more
- 01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the impact of interventions by a community-based organization on immunization rates and found that reminder-recall activities by the communitybased organization improved vaccination rates in intervention clinics compared with control clinics.
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Effectiveness of computer-generated telephone messages in increasing clinic visits.
TL;DR: Improvement in kept appointment rates associated with receiving the message was highest for the immunization-program, with increases of 64%, 53%, and 44% for the well-child; women, infant, and children; and family-planning programs, respectively.