Workplace Vaccination Against COVID-19 and Seasonal Influenza in the United States: A Modeling-Based Estimation of the Health and Economic Benefits for Employers and Employees

The objectives were to assess the economic burden of COVID-19 and impact of workplace COVID-19 vaccination in the United States (US). An economic model estimated COVID-19 workplace burden (infections, long COVID, inpatient/outpatient care, absent days) with and without vaccination, compared with sea...

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Main Authors: Ekkehard Beck, Keya Joshi, Darshan Mehta, Stephane Lorenc, Bishoy Rizkalla, Nicolas Van de Velde
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-04-01
Series:Journal of Market Access & Health Policy
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2001-6689/13/2/17
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Summary:The objectives were to assess the economic burden of COVID-19 and impact of workplace COVID-19 vaccination in the United States (US). An economic model estimated COVID-19 workplace burden (infections, long COVID, inpatient/outpatient care, absent days) with and without vaccination, compared with seasonal influenza vaccination for context, using Optum’s de-identified Clinformatics<sup>®</sup> Data Mart Database. Without workplace vaccination, an average US business (with 10,000 employees), had 18,175 absent days from COVID-19 and lost productivity costs of USD 5.08 million. Implementing COVID-19 workplace vaccination (at 70% coverage) prevented approximately 3132 absent days, saving employers USD 876,453 (lost productivity) and USD 240,633 (medical costs); and saving employees USD 182,196 (medical costs) and USD 198,250 (lost wages) versus no COVID-19 workplace vaccination. The burden and vaccination impact were greater for COVID-19 versus seasonal influenza. Workplace vaccination for COVID-19 and seasonal influenza can have a significant impact for both the employer and employees through averted disease.
ISSN:2001-6689