| Literature DB >> 26880154 |
Afiong Oku1, Angela Oyo-Ita2, Claire Glenton3, Atle Fretheim3,4, Heather Ames3, Artur Muloliwa5, Jessica Kaufman6, Sophie Hill6, Julie Cliff7, Yuri Cartier8, Xavier Bosch-Capblanch9,10, Gabriel Rada11, Simon Lewin3,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective communication is a critical component in ensuring that children are fully vaccinated. Although numerous communication interventions have been proposed and implemented in various parts of Nigeria, the range of communication strategies used has not yet been mapped systematically. This study forms part of the 'Communicate to vaccinate' (COMMVAC) project, an initiative aimed at building research evidence for improving communication with parents and communities about childhood vaccinations in low- and middle-income countries.Entities:
Keywords: Nigeria; childhood vaccination; communication interventions
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26880154 PMCID: PMC4754015 DOI: 10.3402/gha.v9.30337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
List of stakeholders interviewed
| Level | Interviewees | Number of interviewees |
|---|---|---|
| National | Chief of Communication for Development, UNICEF | 1 |
| National Immunization Officer for Communication, WHO | 1 | |
| GAVI representative | 1 | |
| Communication Analyst at the National Polio Emergency Centre | 1 | |
| State | Social Mobilization Officer (State Health Educator): Two in Cross River and one in Bauchi | 3 |
| Deputy Director, Community Health Services (Bauchi) | 1 | |
| State Immunization officer: Two in Cross River and one in Bauchi | 3 | |
| Deputy Director, Immunization Services (Bauchi) | 1 | |
| Volunteer Community Mobilizer (Bauchi) | 1 | |
| Traditional leader (Bauchi) | 1 | |
| Religious leader (Bauchi) | 1 | |
| ‘Journalists against Polio’ Association representative (Bauchi) | 1 | |
| Local | Local Immunization Officer (Bauchi or Cross River) | 2 |
| Local Social Mobilization Officer (Bauchi or Cross River) | 2 | |
| Vaccinators (rural) (Bauchi or Cross River) | 6 | |
| Vaccinators (urban) (Bauchi or Cross River) | 8 | |
| TOTAL | 34 |
The ‘COMMVAC’ taxonomy – categories, definitions, and examples (20)
| Taxonomy categories | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Inform or educate | Interventions to enable consumers to understand the meaning and relevance of vaccination to their health and the health of their family or community. Interventions are sometimes tailored to address low literacy levels and can also serve to address misinformation. | Educational sessions for parents and caregivers in their local health facility |
| Remind or recall | Interventions to remind consumers of required vaccinations and to recall those who are overdue. | Parent reminded through a mobile text message about their child's next vaccination appointment |
| Teaching skills | Interventions focussing on the acquisition of skills related to accessing and communicating about vaccination. Such interventions aim to teach parents early parenting skills such as how to find access and utilise vaccination services. They also include interventions to train parents, communities, and healthcare providers how to communicate or provide vaccination-related education to others. | Teaching people to critically appraise information and information sources through mothers’ groups |
| Provide support | Interventions, often tailored or personalised, to assist people in addressing specific challenges to vaccination that arise within their day-to-day lives (e.g. social issues such as disagreement within a family regarding vaccinating or emotional issues such as parental anxiety about vaccination.) | Biweekly parent support groups in the community or in health facilities |
| In contrast to interventions to | ||
| Facilitate decision-making | Interventions that extend beyond informing or educating by presenting all options related to vaccination decision-making in an unbiased and impartial manner. These interventions should provide detailed, evidence-based information about the risks and benefits of vaccination and should help people consider their personal values and options related to the decision to vaccinate their child. | Decision aid booklets sent to parents before a vaccination appointment |
| Enable communication | Interventions that explicitly and purposively aim to bridge a communication gap or make communication possible with particular people or groups. Generally, the translation of information into the languages of the primary target audience/s would not be included here as a specific intervention because this should be considered a basic implementation requirement. However, translation beyond routine practice in a particular setting such as adaptation of materials for a low- or no-literacy population, translation into braille, or the use of interpreters may be included. | Employment of translators in a clinic to facilitate communication |
| Enhance community ownership | Interventions to increase community participation and promote interaction between communities and health services. Interventions may build trust among consumers and generate awareness and understanding of vaccination. Interventions of this nature embrace collective decision-making and community involvement in planning, programme delivery, research, advocacy, or governance. | Organisations or community groups that consider the need for vaccines in their area discuss the costs and benefits of vaccination, and develop action plans to address barriers to uptake. |
Examples of communication interventions identified in Bauchi and Cross River states
| Purpose of the communication intervention (organised using the COMMVAC taxonomy) | Examples of communication interventions employed in Bauchi State | Examples of communication interventions employed in Cross River State |
|---|---|---|
| Inform or educate | Health talks given by health workers before routine immunisation sessions in immunisation clinics | Educational sessions for parents and caregivers in their local health facility. |
| Remind or recall | Mothers and community members are reminded during home visits or house to house mobilisation by health workers of their next vaccination clinic appointment | Mothers and family members reminded of upcoming campaigns by health workers or through the use of town announcers |
| Teaching skills | Training of volunteer community mobilisers, traditional and religious leaders, to negotiate with non-compliant parents and provide adequate, correct and consistent information to community members | Frontline health workers or other immunisation providers are trained in interpersonal communication and negotiation skills to increase successful interactions with parents and caregivers |
| Provide support | No interventions identified | No interventions identified |
| Facilitate decision-making | No interventions identified | No interventions identified |
| Enable communication | No interventions identified | Health workers or community members who are employed as interpreters to help make communication possible in rural areas |
| Enhance community ownership | Women's groups, youth groups, and other community representatives involved in immunisation campaign days help teams identify missed children | Engagement of traditional or religious leaders and school teachers as advocates for vaccination |