Programs & Tools:
Grantee-Sharing: AFIX Resources
On This Page:
Introduction
Grantees have developed many resources for their AFIX programs and this page is devoted as a place for grantees to share resources with others. Resources shared here have been reviewed by the CDC's Immunization Services Division and have been found to be good examples that others may wish to modify for their own use. Or, the materials here may simply inspire new ways of thinking about your own processes and how to change and improve your own resources.
Each grantees with materials here has given approval for the sharing of their resources, and others are free to modify for their own use. To contact a grantee about a particular resource seen here, please follow the "contacts" link above.
AFIX Feedback Summaries and Tools
The Feedback component of AFIX is critical. The data provided and the format in which those data appear are important. While many grantees give reports to provider offices that number pages long, it is important to have a summary report that quickly captures the most important information and describes it in a way that is understandable to the audience.
The summary feedback forms shown here are good examples of what a summary form can look like. There is no one perfect form that will work for everyone, but each summary shown here does contain certain elements that are worth your consideration. These forms show an awareness that measuring processes is more important or as important as measuring outcomes (up-to-date rates). They also make use of graphs that are easy to understand.
- Georgia: AFIX Visit Report Form (27 KB/1page) (compliant)
- Michigan: AFIX Basic Overview Report (171 KB/1 page) (compliant)
- Michigan: AFIX Visit Report Form (114 KB/3 pages) (compliant)
- Oregon: AFIX Feedback Summary Report (141 KB/3 pages) (compliant)
- Utah: Root Causes Not Up-to-Date (333 KB/1 page) (compliant)
- Utah: Root Causes Missed Opportunities (331 KB/1 page) (compliant)
Content last reviewed on April 28, 2009
Content Source: National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases