VFA Requirements

In exchange for federally funded vaccines, enrolled providers partner with the VFA Program to ensure that federal and state requirements are met, help achieve program goals, and protect the integrity of the program that supplies no-cost vaccines for eligible adults.

Providers agree to comply with all VFA Program requirements, which are summarized in Requirements at a Glance (PDF)

Billing 

To reduce financial barriers for patients, VFA providers must not charge VFA-eligible patients or third-party payers for the cost of VFA vaccines or vaccine administration fee. Locations must prominently post a sign (PDF) clearly visible to patients which states that “FREE vaccines are available to adult patients who are uninsured or have insurance that doesn’t cover (certain) vaccines. We do not charge these patients for getting the vaccine or for the cost of the vaccine.” 

Ordering Vaccines 

Providers order vaccines in myCAvax during a two-week period at the beginning of each quarter. Providers must review VFA doses reported in the California Immunization Registry (CAIR or Healthy Futures/RIDE) before every VFA ordering period or at minimum every six months to ensure VFA doses administered have been documented accurately. Supplemental orders are not allowed. See Ordering Vaccines and VFA Ordering & Distribution Calendars for details. 

Short-Dated Vaccines 

At least six months prior to the expiration of VFA vaccines which a site may not be able to use: 

Provider ProfileEstimate populations served (VFA and private) and update annually. 
Immunization RegistryEnroll in a regional California immunization registry (CAIR or Healthy Futures/RIDE) per AB 1797
RecertificationReaffirm annually that program requirements will be met, key practice information is up to date, and patient estimates are provided. 
Patient Visit
Eligibility ScreeningScreen patients and document eligibility at every patient visit. 
VISs Distribute current Vaccine Information Statements (or Immunization Information Statements) before administering vaccines. 
Vaccine Administration Comply with schedules & recommendations, including doses, intervals, catch-up doses, medical indications, and contraindications. 
Billing  Do not charge for vaccine or administration.  
Report Doses 
Administered 
Report administration data to the regional immunization registry. As a best practice, patient declination of immunization should be documented in the patient’s medical record. 
Vaccine Management
Storage EquipmentEnsure vaccine storage units and digital data loggers meet VFA requirements. 
Storage & Handling Always store vaccines at manufacturer-recommended temperatures from receiving through administration. 
Temperature MonitoringMonitor and record vaccine storage unit temperatures twice daily; respond immediately to and report temperature excursions 
Inventory Management Order vaccines to serve provider patient populations; manage stock to minimize waste; prepare for emergencies impacting vaccines 

Order frequency: quarterly  
Inventory ReportingReport nonviable doses, shipment incidents, and vaccine transfers in myCAvax; sites must contact their Senior Field Representative  to request approval for vaccine transfers. 
Vaccine Management PlanComply with protocols for routine and emergency vaccine management to protect vaccine supply; prepare for emergencies 
Provider Compliance
Site Visits Agree to an enrollment visit and compliance and storage & handling visits; make changes per VFA findings. 
Record Retention Maintain all VFA-related documentation for three years. 
Fraud & Abuse Follow program requirements in a manner to avoid fraud & abuse. 
Accountability Retain documentation for doses received through administration; replace non-viable vaccines due to negligence on a dose-for-dose basis. 
Vaccines for Adults Program