Palivizumab coverage rates among moderate-to-late preterm infants in Korea: a nationwide cross-sectional study
Seungyeon Kim, Saram Lee, Young June Choe, Ju Sun Heo

TL;DR
This study examines how often preterm infants in Korea received a drug called palivizumab to prevent RSV, finding that only about 42% of eligible infants got it.
Contribution
The study provides the first nationwide data on palivizumab coverage rates and identifies factors influencing its administration in Korea.
Findings
Only 42.2% of eligible moderate-to-late preterm infants received palivizumab.
Coverage rates increased annually but remained suboptimal.
Factors like higher gestational age, female sex, and non-capital residence were linked to lower coverage.
Abstract
Since October 2016, Korea has implemented a national reimbursement program for palivizumab aimed at moderate-to-late preterm (MLPT) infants born between 32 0/7 weels and 35 6/7 weeks of gestation during the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) season (October–March). However, large-scale data on coverage rates and associated factors remain limited. This study evaluated palivizumab coverage rates and identified predictive factors influencing its administration in MLPT infants. This nationwide, population-based cross-sectional study utilized data from the Korean National Health Insurance Service collected between October 2016 and March 2019. MLPT infants eligible for palivizumab reimbursement were divided into administration and non-administration groups. Seasonal and overall coverage rates were assessed. A multivariate logistic regression analysis examined factors associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal Respiratory Health Research · Infant Nutrition and Health · Infant Development and Preterm Care
