| Literature DB >> 29965975 |
Saleena Subaiya1,2, Collins Tabu3, James N'ganga4, Abdulkadir Amin Awes4, Kibet Sergon5, Leonard Cosmas5, Ashley Styczynski2, Samson Thuo3, Emmaculate Lebo1, Reinhard Kaiser6, Robert Perry7, Peter Ademba3, Katrina Kretsinger7, Iheoma Onuekwusi5, Howard Gary1, Heather M Scobie1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: To achieve measles elimination, two doses of measles-containing vaccine (MCV) are provided through routine immunization services or vaccination campaigns. In May 2016, Kenya conducted a measles-rubella (MR) vaccination campaign targeting 19 million children aged 9 months-14 years, with a goal of achieving ≥95% coverage. We conducted a post-campaign cluster survey to estimate national coverage and classify coverage in Kenya's 47 counties.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29965975 PMCID: PMC6028100 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Socio-demographic characteristics of respondents in the measles-rubella vaccination coverage survey—Kenya, 2016.
| Urban | 1,941 | 24 | ||
| Rural | 6,312 | 76 | ||
| Household head’s occupation | ||||
| Unemployed, Retired, or Student | 693 | 8 | ||
| Subsistence Farming | 3,260 | 40 | ||
| Pastoralist | 820 | 10 | ||
| Self- Employed | 1,972 | 24 | ||
| Formal employment | 1,346 | 16 | ||
| Other | 102 | 1 | ||
| Household head’s education | ||||
| None | 1,668 | 20 | ||
| Primary | 3,780 | 46 | ||
| Secondary | 2,698 | 33 | ||
| Other | 107 | 1 | ||
| Caregiver’s education | ||||
| None | 1,816 | 22 | ||
| Primary | 4,225 | 51 | ||
| Secondary | 2,126 | 26 | ||
| Other | 86 | 1 | ||
| Caregiver’s literacy | ||||
| Illiterate | 1,136 | 14 | ||
| Literate | 7,117 | 86 | ||
| Swahili & English | 3,650 | 51 | ||
| Swahili | 2,357 | 33 | ||
| English | 65 | 1 | ||
| Other | 1,045 | 15 | ||
| Caregiver’s religion | ||||
| Catholic | 1,730 | 21 | ||
| Other Christian | 5,010 | 61 | ||
| Muslim | 1,217 | 15 | ||
| Other | 296 | 4 | ||
| Caregiver’s age (years) | 35 | (12–95) | ||
| Household size (persons) | 5 | (1–24) | ||
| Eligible no. of children per caregiver | 2 | (1–10) | ||
| % | ||||
| Child’s sex | ||||
| Female | 9,694 | 48 | ||
| Male | 10,317 | 52 | ||
| Child’s age | ||||
| 9-59m | 5,837 | 29 | ||
| 5-9y | 7,614 | 38 | ||
| 10-14y | 6,560 | 33 | ||
| Child’s school attendance | ||||
| Day school | 14,992 | 75 | ||
| Boarding school | 267 | 1 | ||
| No school | 4,752 | 24 | ||
* Respondents were asked to select all languages for which they could read and write
** Age data were missing for 64 caregivers because of issue with electronic form
Estimated measles-rubella campaign vaccination coverage overall and by subpopulation—Kenya, 2016.
| Variable | Coverage (95% CI) | No. Vaccinated | Total No. | P-value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 95% (94%-96%) | 19,001 | 20,011 | - | ||
| By fingermark | 9% (8%-10%) | 1,703 | ||||
| By caregiver’s recall | 87% (85%-88%) | 17,298 | ||||
| Residence | ||||||
| Urban | 95% (92%-97%) | 3,856 | 4,074 | p = 0.570 | ||
| Rural | 96% (95%-96%) | 15,145 | 15,937 | |||
| Child’s age | ||||||
| 9–59 months | 94% (93%-95%) | 5,446 | 5,837 | p<0.001 | ||
| 5–9 years | 97% (96%-97%) | 7,335 | 7,614 | |||
| 10–14 years | 95% (94%-96%) | 6,220 | 6,560 | |||
| Child’s sex | ||||||
| Female | 96% (95%-97%) | 9,234 | 9,694 | p = 0.002 | ||
| Male | 95% (94%-96%) | 9,767 | 10,317 | |||
| Child’s school attendance | ||||||
| Day school | 97% (96%-98%) | 14,569 | 14,992 | p<0.001 | ||
| Boarding school | 90% (84%-94%) | 235 | 267 | |||
| Does not attend school | 90% (88%-92%) | 4,197 | 4,752 | |||
| Household head’s occupation | ||||||
| Unemployed, retired, student | 93% (86%-96%) | 1,570 | 1,678 | p = 0.025 | ||
| Subsistence farming | 96% (95%-97%) | 7,835 | 8,168 | |||
| Pastoralist | 90% (86%-93%) | 2,315 | 2,592 | |||
| Self-employed | 96% (95%-97%) | 4,229 | 4,390 | |||
| Formal employment | 96% (95%-97%) | 2,814 | 2,929 | |||
| Other | 95% (87%-97%) | 238 | 254 | |||
| Household head’s education | ||||||
| No education | 92% (89%-94%) | 4,326 | 4,750 | p<0.001 | ||
| Primary education | 96% (95%-97%) | 8,876 | 9,202 | |||
| Secondary education | 96% (94%-97%) | 5,547 | 5,765 | |||
| Other | 94% (84%-98%) | 252 | 294 | |||
| Caregiver’s education | ||||||
| No education | 91% (88%-94%) | 4,882 | 5,360 | p<0.001 | ||
| Primary education | 96% (96%-97%) | 9,924 | 10,293 | |||
| Secondary education | 96% (95%-97%) | 3,988 | 4,122 | |||
| Other | 95% (87%-98%) | 207 | 236 | |||
| Caregiver’s literacy | ||||||
| Literate | 96% (96%-97%) | 16,033 | 16,705 | p<0.001 | ||
| Illiterate | 89% (85%-93%) | 2,968 | 3,306 | |||
| Caregiver’s religion | ||||||
| Catholic | 96% (95%-97%) | 3,855 | 4,037 | p = 0.005 | ||
| Other Christian | 96% (96%-97%) | 11,078 | 11,471 | |||
| Muslim | 90% (84%-94%) | 3,351 | 3,683 | |||
| Other | 90% (85%-94%) | 717 | 820 | |||
| Household wealth quintile | ||||||
| 1 (lowest) | 91% (88%-93%) | 4,671 | 5,174 | |||
| 2 | 96% (94%-97%) | 4,098 | 4,254 | |||
| 3 | 97% (96%-98%) | 3,874 | 3,964 | p<0.001 | ||
| 4 | 97% (96%-98%) | 3,445 | 3,545 | |||
| 5 (highest) | 96% (94%-97%) | 2,940 | 2,940 | |||
* Statistically significant result by Rao-Scott chi-square test
Fig 1Classification of measles-rubella campaign vaccination coverage by county—Kenya, 2016.
Coverage point estimates (one-sided upper and lower 95% confidence bounds [1-S 95% CB]) for children aged 9 months–14 years by country are graphed and printed in the columns to the right of the graph, along with the design effects (DE), intra-cluster correlation coefficients (ICC), and effective sample sizes (ESS = observed sample size / DE; where DE <1.0, a DE of 1.0 was used to calculate ESS). County coverages colored in green were classified as ‘passing,’ or likely to have coverage ≥95% (i.e., lower confidence bound was >95%). Coverages depicted in yellow were classified as ‘intermediate,’ or unable to confidently classify as above or below 95% given the survey sample size (i.e., upper and lower confidence bounds straddled the 95% threshold). Coverages shown in red were classified as ‘failing,’ or likely to have coverage <95% (i.e., upper confidence bound was below 95%).
Fig 2Map of measles-rubella (MR) campaign vaccination coverage and reported information sources by county—Kenya, 2016.
(A) Using one-sided hypothesis testing against a programmatic threshold of 95%, MR campaign coverage of children aged 9 months–14 years was classified by county as either passing (likely to have coverage ≥95%), intermediate (unable to confidently classify as above or below 95% given the survey sample size), or failing (likely to have coverage <95%). Mandera is the northeast county depicted in red, which was the site of a measles outbreak in 2016, and Turkana is the other county depicted in red in the northwest. (B) The main source of MR campaign information that was most frequently reported by caregivers is depicted by respective county of residence.
Measles-rubella campaign awareness and main source of information reported by caregivers—Kenya, 2016.
| Responses (n = 8,253) | No. | % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7,603 | 92.1 | ||
| Radio | 2,402 | 31.6 | |
| Loudspeaker/PA | 1,845 | 24.3 | |
| Health worker | 1,110 | 14.6 | |
| Family/neighbor/friends | 502 | 6.6 | |
| TV | 379 | 5 | |
| Church/mosque/temple | 326 | 4.3 | |
| Community leader | 311 | 4.1 | |
| Mobile Phone/SMS | 221 | 2.9 | |
| Campaign vaccinator | 139 | 1.8 | |
| School | 135 | 1.8 | |
| House visitor | 101 | 1.3 | |
| Poster/banner | 49 | 0.6 | |
| Women/Youth group | 44 | 0.6 | |
| Newspaper | 8 | 0.1 | |
| Internet/Social Media | 7 | 0.1 | |
| Other | 24 | 0.3 | |
Estimated proportion of children by age group and number of measles doses received at the end of the measles-rubella vaccination campaign—Kenya, 2016.
| No. of doses | Source | 9–59 months | 5–9 years | 10–14 years | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Percentage | No. | Percentage (95% CI) | No. | Percentage (95% CI) | Percentage | |||
| 83 | 0.8 (0.6–1.2) | 64 | 0.8 (0.5–1.2) | 39 | 0.6 (0.4–0.9) | 186 | 0.7 (0.6–0.9) | ||
| 243 | 3.9 (3.1–4.8) | 93 | 1.1 (0.8–1.5) | 122 | 1.6 (1.2–2.2) | 458 | 2.1 (1.8–2.5) | ||
| 253 | 4.5 (3.7–5.5) | 246 | 3.6 (2.9–4.6) | 277 | 4.6 (3.8–5.5) | 776 | 4.2 (3.6–4.9) | ||
| 1 | 0.0 (0.0–0.1) | 14 | 0.1 (0.0–0.3) | 15 | 0.1 (0.1–0.3) | 30 | 0.1 (0.1–0.2) | ||
| 51 | 1.1 (0.7–1.6) | 0 | - | 0 | - | 51 | 0.3 (0.2–0.5) | ||
| 3,744 | 64.2 (62.2–66.0) | 2,179 | 29.2 (27.2–31.4) | 1,576 | 25.6 (23.7–27.6) | 7,499 | 38.4 (36.9–40.0) | ||
| 12 | 0.2 (0.1–0.3) | 108 | 1.4 (0.9–2.3) | 164 | 2.8 (1.9–3.9) | 284 | 1.5 (1.0–2.1) | ||
| 12 | 0.2 (0.1–0.4) | 156 | 2.0 (1.4–2.8) | 156 | 2.5 (1.7–3.5) | 324 | 1.6 (1.2–2.2) | ||
| 869 | 15.5 (14.3–16.9) | 0 | - | 0 | - | 869 | 4.6 (4.2–5.1) | ||
| 1 | 0.0 (0.0–0.1) | 0 | - | 0 | - | 1 | 0.0 (0.0–0.0) | ||
| 537 | 8.9 (7.8–10.2) | 4,754 | 61.7 (59.5–63.9) | 4,211 | 62.3 (60.0–64.5) | 9,502 | 46.2 (44.6–47.7) | ||
| 31 | 0.7 (0.4–1.3) | 0 | - | 0 | - | 31 | 0.2 (0.1–0.4) | ||
* Includes the first and seconds measles-containing vaccine doses received through routine health services (MCV1, MCV2), the 2016 measles-rubella (MR) campaign dose, and prior campaign doses. Vaccination status was documented by card (for MCV1 and MCV2 only), finger marking (MR campaign only), or caregiver’s recall (for all doses). Where caregivers indicated a child received more than one prior campaign dose, only one prior campaign dose was included in the analysis to minimize the effect of recall bias. Inclusion of MCV2 doses was limited to children aged 18–35 months (after MCV2 introduction in Kenya).
Fig 3Estimated coverage with two doses of measles-containing vaccine (MCV) after the 2016 measles-rubella (MR) campaign in Kenya.
(A) Graph of the number of MCV doses received by one-year age cohort, including the MCV1 and MCV2 doses provided by routine immunization services, the MR campaign dose, and previous measles campaign doses as documented by vaccination cards, campaign finger-markings and caregivers’ recall. (B) Map of two-dose MCV coverage of children aged 9 months–14 years by county.