| Literature DB >> 34066844 |
Dan Gong1,2, Qiyun Jiang1,2, Tracey Chantler3, Fiona Yueqian Sun4, Jiatong Zou5, Jiejie Cheng1,2, Yuqian Chen1,2, Chengyue Li1,2, Mei Sun1,2, Natasha Howard3,6.
Abstract
In China, there are two categories of vaccines available from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and associated public health agencies. Extended Program of Immunization (EPI) vaccines are government-funded and non-EPI vaccines are voluntary and paid for out-of-pocket. The government plans to transition some non-EPI vaccines to EPI in the coming years, which may burden public health system capacity, particularly in terms of budget, workforce, supply chains, and information systems. Our study explored vaccinator and caregiver perspectives on introducing non-EPI vaccines into routine immunization and perceived facilitators and barriers affecting this transition. We conducted a qualitative study from a realist perspective, analysing semi-structured interviews with 26 vaccination providers and 160 caregivers in three provinces, selected to represent regional socioeconomic disparities across Eastern, Central, and Western China. Data were analysed thematically, using deductive and inductive coding. Most participants were positive about adding vaccines to the national schedule. Candidate EPI vaccines most frequently recommended by participants were varicella, mumps vaccine, and hand-foot-mouth disease. Providers generally considered existing workspaces, cold-chain equipment, and funding sufficient, but described frontline staffing and vaccine information systems as requiring improvement. This is the first qualitative study to explore interest, barriers, and facilitators related to adding vaccines to China's national schedule from provider and caregiver perspectives. Findings can inform government efforts to introduce additional vaccines, by including efforts to retain and recruit vaccine programme staff and implement whole-process data management and health information systems that allow unified nationwide data collection and sharing.Entities:
Keywords: China; barriers and facilitators; health systems; routine immunization; vaccination
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066844 PMCID: PMC8151436 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines9050476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Participant characteristics.
| Provider Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Province | |
| Guangdong | 7 (26.9) |
| Henan | 9 (34.6) |
| Sichuan | 10 (38.5) |
| Age in years [mean] | 42.5 ± 7.3 |
| Age range | |
| <35 | 5 (19.2) |
| 35–45 | 12 (46.2) |
| >45 | 9 (34.6) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 9 (34.6) |
| Female | 17 (65.4) |
| Educational level | |
| Below vocational college | 6 (23.1) |
| Vocational college | 6 (23.1) |
| Undergraduate | 5 (19.2) |
| Masters | 1 (3.8) |
| Missing | 8 (30.8) * |
| Major | |
| Clinical medicine | 5 (19.2) |
| Nursing | 11 (42.3) |
| Preventive medicine | 6 (23.1) |
| Sanitary inspection | 1 (3.8) |
| Chinese medicine | 1 (3.8) |
| Missing | 2 (7.7) * |
| Personnel category | |
| CDC EPI manager | 3 (11.5) |
| EPI manager | 18 (69.3) |
| Vaccinator | 5 (19.2) |
|
|
|
| Province | |
| Guangdong | 66 (41.2) |
| Henan | 51 (31.9) |
| Sichuan | 43 (26.9) |
| Age in years [mean] | 35.0 ± 11.0 |
| Age range | |
| <35 | 100 (62.5) |
| 35–45 | 19 (11.9) |
| >45 | 30 (18.8) |
| Missing | 11 (6.8) * |
| Gender | |
| Male | 33 (20.6) |
| Female | 127 (79.4) |
| Educational level | |
| Below vocational college | 34 (21.3) |
| Vocational college | 10 (6.3) |
| Undergraduate | 13 (8.1) |
| Master | 1 (0.6) |
| Missing | 102 (63.7) * |
| Source of respondents | |
| Vaccination facilities | 94 (58.8) |
| Vaccination registers | 66 (41.2) |
| Regional | |
| Urban | 81 (50.6) |
| Rural | 79 (49.4) |
Note: * Some participants were unwilling to disclose personal information.