| Literature DB >> 32725237 |
Farzana B Muhib1, Clint J Pecenka1, Anthony A Marfin1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most vaccines in the Expanded Program on Immunization are universal childhood vaccines (eg, measles and rotavirus vaccines). Other vaccines such as typhoid conjugate (TCV) and Japanese encephalitis vaccines are risk based and only used in countries where populations are at risk of these diseases. However, strategies to introduce risk-based vaccines are becoming complex due to increasing intracountry variability in disease incidence. There is a need to assess whether subnational vaccine strategies are appropriate. CRITERIA, CHALLENGES, AND BENEFITS: Subnational strategies consider intracountry heterogeneous risk and prioritize vaccination only in those areas that are at risk; there is no intent to introduce the vaccine nationally. The following variables should be considered to determine appropriateness of subnational strategies: disease burden, outbreak potential, treatment availability and costs, cost-effectiveness, and availability of other preventive interventions. We propose criteria for each variable and use a hypothetical country considering TCV introduction to show how criteria are applied to determine if a subnational strategy is appropriate. Challenges include granularity of disease-burden data, political challenges of vaccinating only a portion of a population, and potentially higher costs of introduction. Benefits include targeted reduction of disease burden, increased equity for marginalized populations, and progress on development goals.Entities:
Keywords: risk-based; strategy; subnational; vaccine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32725237 PMCID: PMC7388704 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciaa483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Criteria and Indicators for Subnational Vaccine Introduction Strategy Determination
| Variable | Criteria Subnational Vaccine Introduction Strategy | Indicators for Subnational Vaccine Strategy: Hypothetical Country Example |
|---|---|---|
| Disease burden | • Disease is only found in specific areas/populations, or in specific environmental contexts within countries. | • Disease present in urban areas, majority of disease in urban slum areas. |
| Potential for outbreaks | • Potential for outbreaks is concentrated in areas that have a specific set of environmental or exposure/risk characteristics. | • There are no current outbreaks of disease. However, during the rainy season, areas that are prone to flooding have experienced localized outbreaks. |
| Treatment availability and costs | • Availability of treatment is scarce in certain geographic areas and/or the associated costs are high for those most at risk of disease. | • Access to healthcare is low in urban slum populations, with public service seen as low quality, leading parents to seek out more expensive private care. |
| Cost-effectiveness | • The vaccine is only cost-effective in certain high- to medium-disease-burden areas. | • Given the distribution of disease burden, vaccine cost-effectiveness is highest in urban areas. |
| Other interventions | • Limited or no interventions exist to prevent the disease in the country. | • Access to clean water and sanitation services is limited, with marginalized populations in urban areas with less access than other populations in the country. |