Ravi Prakash , Pradeep Kumar , Bidyadhar Dehury , Deep Thacker , Esther Shoemaker , Ramesh Banadakoppa Manjappa , Shajy Isac , John Anthony , Vasanthakumar Namasivayam , James Blanchard , Marissa Becker , Ties Boerma
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
Global interventions on routine immunization aim to achieve at least 90 % immunization coverage of all vaccines as per national immunization schedules, aligning with the Immunization Agenda 2030. Despite significant global progress, regions like Uttar Pradesh (UP), India's most populous state, require more efforts to meet this target.
Methods
In 2021, a quantitative survey was conducted with 10,591 mothers/caregivers of children aged 0–15 months and 479 linked community health workers (Accredited Social Health Activists, ASHAs) responsible for connecting these families with vaccine services across 444 rural villages in UP. We developed a coverage cascade to assess the coverage of all basic vaccines (1 dose of each BCG and MR, and 3 doses each of DPT/Penta and Polio), immunization dropouts, and their drivers.
Findings
While 96.4 % of service platforms had the required vaccines available and 94.7 % of children aged 12–15 months had received the first dose of Pentavalent vaccine, only 67.8 % of children received all basic vaccines, with 53.5 % completing these vaccines in the first year of life. More than half (53 %) of dropouts were concentrated in 30 % of ASHA areas. Among these areas, 13 % had no dropouts, and 29 % had more than 60 % of children aged 12–15 months with incomplete immunization. Areas with high dropout rates had higher rates of home deliveries, lower possession of parent-held vaccination records (MCP cards), and poor community-level factors such as incomplete record keeping by ASHAs, less supportive supervision by their supervisors, and relatively lower work motivation compared to areas with no dropouts.
Conclusion
The wide heterogeneity in immunization coverage and dropouts emphasize the need to identify area-specific patterns and reasons for low immunization coverage and to develop interventions to address them. Robust support systems for community health workers and comprehensive record-keeping are pivotal to improve immunization coverage and to reduce the burden of vaccine-preventable diseases.