# Rethinking population health in practice: pediatric immunizations as a policy and system integration case

**Authors:** Diego R. Hijano

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2026.1749357 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

This paper explores how to better implement population health strategies, using pediatric immunizations as an example to highlight challenges and solutions in policy and system integration.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a structured integration framework for translating population health principles into actionable immunization strategies.

## Key findings

- A structured integration framework can help align clinical, organizational, and policy domains in immunization systems.
- Key policy levers include interoperable data infrastructure and equity-focused payment incentives.
- Measurable indicators are proposed to support accountability and integration in immunization delivery.

## Abstract

This conceptual policy analysis examines the persistent gap between population health frameworks and their implementation in practice, using pediatric immunizations as a case example. Declining vaccine coverage and widening geographic disparities illustrate how broad definitions of population health may lack the operational structure needed to guide coordinated governance and delivery. Informed by a structured narrative review of peer-reviewed literature, policy reports, and national surveillance data, the Rainbow Model of Integrated Care is applied to analyze how clinical, professional, organizational, system, functional, and normative domains shape immunization performance across preventive care systems. The analysis identifies policy-relevant levers, including interoperable data infrastructure, alignment of exemption governance, integration of equity-focused payment incentives, community-partnered outreach, and transparent performance monitoring. For each domain, implementation considerations, authority structures, privacy safeguards, resourcing implications, and potential political and ethical trade-offs are examined. Illustrative measurable indicators are proposed to operationalize integration and support accountability. Although grounded primarily in the United States context, the challenges described and structural considerations discussed are relevant to other decentralized health systems. This analysis suggests that structured integration frameworks may assist policymakers in translating population health principles into coordinated and ethically grounded implementation strategies for immunization systems.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13039011/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13039011