| Literature DB >> 35340931 |
F Aslam1, I Ali2,3, Z Babar4, Y Yang1,5.
Abstract
Vaccine coverage for children is an important indicator of the performance of national health and immunization systems. Most of the existing literature has targeted mothers' low educational level, living in underserved districts and/or remote rural areas and economic poverty that are correlated with low immunization coverage but the supply- and demand-side constraints to immunization in low- and middle- income countries (LMICs) are not well understood. The reliability of claimed administrative immunization coverage in these contexts is questionable. To address these barriers within the present Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI), the difficulties related to inadequate vaccination uptake must be addressed in more depth. Building on already produced literature, this study aims to determine the extent of immunization coverage among children in LMICs, as well as to fill in the gaps in awareness about system-level obstacles that currently hinder the effective delivery and uptake of immunization services through EPI. By two reviewers, a literature search using PubMed and Google Scholar along with targeted grey literature was conducted on the 2nd of June 2021 by following PRISMA guidelines. The search techniques for electronic databases used both Medical Subject Headings (Mesh) and free-text words were tailored to each database's specific needs using a controlled vocabulary that was limited to the English language from 2000 and 2020. Of the 689 records, eleven articles were included in this review meeting the inclusion criteria. In total, five articles related to vaccination coverage, four studies on components of the routine immunization system, one article on the implementation of new and under-utilized vaccines and one were on vaccines financing. We evaluated the quality of the included studies and extracted into tables created by one investigator and double-checked by another. Review findings suggest that specific strategies to reduce inequality may be required. Vaccine procurement and pricing strategies, as well as vaccine customization to meet the needs of LMICs, are all critical components in strengthening immunization systems. Our findings could be used to establish practical strategies for countries and development partners to address coverage gaps and improve vaccination system effectiveness. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40267-021-00890-7.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35340931 PMCID: PMC8933664 DOI: 10.1007/s40267-021-00890-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs Ther Perspect ISSN: 1172-0360
Fig. 1Flow chart selection process (PRISMA)
Characteristics of studies
| References | Study design | Type of vaccination carried out | Country | Target group | Study Period | Vaccine | Study outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arsenault et al. [ | Survey | Coverage | Gavi-supported countries | Children 12–23 months | 2005–14 | DTP3 and MCV | The coverage of DTP3 and the magnitude of inequalities among nations were found to be highly variable, with results for MCV being similar to those for DTP3. Political stability, gender equality, and a ↓ land surface area were all found to be significant predictors of ↑ and more equitable DTP3 coverage. DTP3 coverage disparities were also ↓ in nations with more external health resources, ↓ rates of out-of-pocket spending, and better national coverage. Better vaccination outcomes were associated with ↑ government health investment and reduced linguistic fractionalization. In order to improve vaccination coverage and reduce inequities, policies and programmes must address major social determinants of health, such as geographic and social exclusion, gender disparity, and the availability of financial health protection. More investigation into the mechanisms that contribute to these relationships is needed |
| Hajizadeh [ | Survey | Coverage | LMICs | children aged ≤ 59 months | 2010–15 | BCG, DTP, Polio and measles vaccines | The findings revealed that vaccination coverage was pro-rich in most countries, with children from higher socioeconomic status groups less likely than their lower socioeconomic status counterparts to receive all four basic vaccines. The concentration of antenatal care visits among wealthier mothers was positively associated with the concentration of vaccination coverage among wealthier children, according to meta-regression studies (coefficient=0.606, 95% CI 0.301 to 0.911). In most LMICs, pro-rich vaccination distribution remains a major public health concern. Policies targeted at improving prenatal care visits among women from lower socioeconomic categories may help to ↓ socioeconomic inequalities in vaccine coverage |
| Hanvoravongchai et al. [ | Cross-sectional | Impact of AMEAs on Immunization services & Health system | Bangladesh, Brazil, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Tajikistan, and Vietnam | Key informants and health staff | 2009–10 | Measles vaccines | The influence of AMEAs was shown to vary, with good and negative implications in certain immunization and health-care system functions Overall, good effects on vaccination services were seen in Bangladesh, Brazil, Tajikistan, and Vietnam, while negative effects were seen in Cameroon and Ethiopia. While weaker health systems may not be able to profit adequately from AMEAs, disruptions to health care delivery are rare in more developed health systems. Opportunities to strengthen the routine vaccination service and health system should be actively pursued in order to alleviate system bottlenecks and reap advantages for both the eradication effort and other health priorities |
| Hoest et al. [ | Observational | EPI schedule adherence and coverage | South Asia, Africa, and South America | Children (birth-24 months) | 2009–14 | EPI schedule | EPI vaccine coverage rates varied between sites and by kind of vaccine; overall, coverage was highest in Nepal and Bangladesh and lowest in Tanzania and Brazil. BCG coverage ranged from 87-100% across all sites, but measles vaccination rates varied from 73-100%. In all sites, there were significant delays between the intended administration age and the actual vaccination date, especially for the measles vaccine, when less than 40% of doses were given on time. A variety of socioeconomic characteristics were shown to be strongly linked to vaccination status in study children, however the findings were mostly site-specific. These findings underline the importance of increasing measles vaccination rates and reducing delayed vaccination in order to meet EPI targets for herd immunity and disease transmission reduction |
| Ikilezi et al. [ | Survey | Coverage | LMICs | Children aged < 2 years | 1996–2016 | DTP3, PCV3, pentavalent3, MCV2and rotavirus2 | This study found that aid had considerable positive impacts in this study, especially among the newer vaccinations. Using 2016 country-specific disbursements and coverage levels as a baseline, it was estimated that additional donor assistance for health (DAH) per capita required to reach 90% ranged from 0.01USD to 4.33USD for PCV, 0.03USD to 9.06USD for pentavalent vaccine, and 0.01USD to 2.57USD for rotavirus vaccine among recipient countries below the universal target. For PCV, pentavalent, and rotavirus vaccines, the expected number of children vaccinated due to Gavi support was 46.6 million, 75.2 million, and 12.3 million, respectively. This analysis indicates that global immunization campaigns have been implemented successfully in the past, both historically and in the future. In order to attain universal vaccination coverage, methods for fiscal sustainability and efficiency must be reinforced as more vaccines are introduced and countries migrate away from foreign help |
| Kimman et al. [ | Survey | Updating of Immunization program | Global | Health staffa, and health economists | 2006 | NIP | The final judgement on a prospective change in the NIP cannot be based on a simple algorithm Because the relevant information contains components of varying kinds and magnitudes, to which different value judgments may be added, and which may have varying degrees of uncertainty. Every NIP should be supported by an active surveillance effort because any alteration could result in unanticipated changes in the vaccine's efficacy, evolutionary consequences, such as the pathogen's antigenic composition, and safety profile. Clinical–epidemiological surveillance, vaccine coverage surveillance, immunological surveillance, microbial population dynamics surveillance, and adverse event and safety issue surveillance are all part of the process. The decision to include a vaccination in the NIP should be treated as seriously as the decision to exclude a vaccine from the NIP, both scientifically and ethically |
| Ladner [ | Survey | Aiding program | LMICs | Program manager | 2009–14 | HPV | There were 29 initiatives in total, implemented by 23 institutions in 19 LMICs. Prior to the start of the vaccine campaign, twenty programme managers (97.7%) reported that their institution used vaccination sensitization techniques. The most commonly mentioned roadblocks were erroneous public perceptions about the vaccine's safety and efficacy. Significant health system constraints were found as insufficient infrastructure, human resource funding, and vaccination distribution technique. HPV vaccination and cervical cancer screening rates ↑ by combining HPV vaccination with other health interventions for mothers of targeted girls. The majority of programme directors said their initiatives had a favorable impact on national HPV vaccination policies. The majority of institutions have national and international partners who helped with human resources, technical aid, health professional training, and financial support. For such achievement, adequate and tailored planning and resources that support information sharing, sensitization, and mobilization are required. These findings can help inform the development of HPV vaccination programmes and policy in LMICs |
| Makinen et al. [ | Interview | Adoption of new vaccines | LMICs and UMICss | Participants in decision making | 2010 | New vaccine adoption | The most important criteria for acceptance were WHO guidelines, the availability of local epidemiological data, and a set of parameters including affordability, cost-effectiveness, and overall cost of the new vaccination for the programme. Although their resources and capacity differ, NITAG play an important role in advising decision-makers. Pooled procurement arrangements for vaccine procurement have advantages for both country decision-makers and manufacturers. Assistance with making epidemiological data and vaccine market information accessible to countries, building and reinforcing related analysis capacity, and assisting with purchasing mechanisms and practices such as pooled procurement are among the recommendations for countries and the international community |
| Ortega et al. [ | Survey | Coverage | LMICs | Children (less than 1 year) | 2002–2013 | DTP.MCV,Polio | The main result of the empirical analysis was that the relative level of IFFs to total trade negatively impacted vaccination coverage but only in the case of countries with very high levels of perceived corruption. Given that there was an annual average of 18 million infants in this cluster of 25 countries, this result suggests that at least 34,000 children may not receive this basic health care intervention in the future as a consequence of ↑ in IFFs in any particular year. The main focus has been the urgent need to ↓ IFFs as part of development policy |
| Restrepo-Méndez et al. [ | Survey | Coverage | LMICs | Children (any age)b | 2000–2015 | BCG,MCV1,DTP3, Polio vaccine | Around 56–69% of eligible children in LMICs appeared to have had full immunization in each of the WHO areas. However, the average amount of such coverage within each region varied substantially. It ranged from 11.4 % in Chad to 90.3 % in Rwanda in the African region. Madagascar and Mozambique looked to have made the most progress in enhancing full vaccination coverage over the last two decades, especially among the poorest quintiles of their populations, among the countries in which the coverage patterns analyzed. When just national mean values of full vaccination coverage are provided, most LMICs are influenced by pro-rich and pro-urban inequality |
| Utazi et. al [ | Survey | Coverage | LMICs | Children aged < 5 years | 2011, 2013–14 | MCV | In geo-statistical models, only 4–5 covariates were found to be substantially predictive of measles vaccine coverage, with distance repeatedly picked as a crucial predictor. Significant heterogeneities within the three nations were highlighted by the output 1 1 km maps, which were not reflected by province-level summaries. When combined with demographic statistics, it was discovered that just a few districts had achieved the WHO Global Vaccine Action Plan 2020 target of 80% coverage at the time of the surveys. To eliminate vaccine-preventable diseases, a solid evidence base is needed to guide policies and make optimal use of limited resources |
AMEAs accelerated measles elimination activities, IFFs illicit financial flow, LMICs low- and middle- income countries, NIP national immunization program, NITAG National Immunization Technical Advisory Groups, UMICs upper middle income countries, ↑ increase(s/d), ↓ decrease (s/d)
aIncluded microbiologists, immunologists, epidemiologists and experts on vaccine safety
bFor 20 study countries 18–29 months for MCV, 3 study countries 15–26 for MCV and 12–23 months formed the denominator group in all of the other study countries
Immunization coverage in low- and middle-income countries, by WHO division, 2001–2012 [24]
| Region name | Mean coverage (%) |
|---|---|
| African region | 56.7 |
| American regions | 68.9 |
| South East Asian Regions | 74.0 |
| European Region | 68.2 |
| Eastern Mediterranean Region | 55.5 |
| Western Pacific Regions | 63.2 |
Worldwide Immunization affected by the COVID-19 pandemic 2020 preliminary DTP coverage data compared to equivalent 2019 period [33]
| Regions | Countries reported (% surviving infants) relative difference 2019–20(%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | February | March | April | |
| African (AFR) | 42 (94) | 41 (84) | 41 (84) | 34 (75) |
| Regions of America (AMR) | 20 (23) | 20 (23) | 20 (23) | 0 (0) |
| Eastern Mediterranean region (EMR) | 5 (54) | 5 (54) | 5 (54) | 0 (0) |
| South-East Asia Region (SEAR) | 9 (99) | 9 (99) | 9 (99) | 5 (24) |
| Western Pacific Region (WPR) | 5 (13) | 5 (13) | 5 (13) | 4 (11) |
Inequalities in vaccination due to residency in low and middle income nations by World Health Organization area, 2001–2012 [24]
| Regions name | Mean urban/rural inequality | |
|---|---|---|
| Urban coverage– rural coverage, percentage points | Urban coverage/ rural coverage | |
| African Region | 7.0 | 1.2 |
| Region of the Americas | − 1.0 | 1.0 |
| South-East Asia Region | 2.6 | 1.1 |
| European Region | 3.4 | 1.1 |
| Eastern Mediterranean Region | 11.2 | 1.6 |
| Western Pacific Region | 9.0 | 1.2 |
Fig. 2Cases of wild poliovirus and circulating vaccine derived poliovirus around the world 2010–2019 [1]
Fig. 3Number of priority countries having validated maternal and neonatal tetanus elimination [1]