Fernandez Renae C, Awofeso Niyi, Rammohan Anu
School of Population Health, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Rural Remote Health. 2011;11(3):1702. Epub 2011 Sep 8.
Regional differences in vaccination uptake are common in both developed and developing countries, and are often linked to the availability of healthcare services and socioeconomic factors. In 2007, 0.9 million eligible Indonesian children missed measles vaccination, and 19 456 cases of measles were documented among Indonesian children. The authors investigated rural-urban differentials in measles vaccination coverage among young Indonesian children, and sought to identify key factors influencing the probability of a child receiving the first dose of measles vaccination in Indonesia.
Data used in the analyses were sourced from the nationally representative Indonesia Demographic and Health Survey 2007. The influence of location of residence, household wealth, maternal and paternal education, total children ever born and use of skilled birth attendants on measles vaccination coverage was investigated using bivariate analysis and chi-square tests. The independent effects of these variables were established using binomial logistic regression analysis.
Indonesia's 2007 first-dose measles national vaccination coverage was, at 72.8%, lower than the 2008 global first-dose measles vaccination average coverage of 82%. Bivariate analysis revealed that the first-dose measles vaccination coverage in rural areas of Indonesia was 68.5%, compared with 80.1% in urban regions (p < 0.001). The apparent significance of rural residence in impairing vaccination coverage was marginal after controlling for the sex of the child, maternal age, maternal and paternal education, wealth, and access to skilled health workers.
Apart from sustainable initiatives to increase measles vaccination coverage globally, it is important to close the rural-urban gap in Indonesia's measles vaccination uptake. Addressing critical determinants of inferior measles vaccination coverage in Indonesia's rural regions will facilitate major improvements in Indonesia's child health trends. This article suggests initiatives for addressing three of such determinants in Indonesia's rural areas: poverty, parental education and access to skilled health workers.
在发达国家和发展中国家,疫苗接种率的地区差异都很常见,且通常与医疗服务的可及性和社会经济因素有关。2007年,90万符合条件的印度尼西亚儿童未接种麻疹疫苗,并且在印度尼西亚儿童中记录到19456例麻疹病例。作者调查了印度尼西亚幼儿麻疹疫苗接种覆盖率的城乡差异,并试图确定影响印度尼西亚儿童接种第一剂麻疹疫苗概率的关键因素。
分析中使用的数据来自具有全国代表性的《2007年印度尼西亚人口与健康调查》。使用双变量分析和卡方检验研究了居住地点、家庭财富、父母教育程度、生育子女总数以及熟练接生员的使用对麻疹疫苗接种覆盖率的影响。使用二项逻辑回归分析确定这些变量的独立效应。
印度尼西亚2007年第一剂麻疹疫苗的全国接种覆盖率为72.8%,低于2008年全球第一剂麻疹疫苗接种平均覆盖率82%。双变量分析显示,印度尼西亚农村地区第一剂麻疹疫苗接种覆盖率为68.5%,而城市地区为80.1%(p<0.001)。在控制了儿童性别、母亲年龄、父母教育程度、财富以及获得熟练卫生工作者服务的机会后,农村居住对疫苗接种覆盖率的明显影响变得微不足道。
除了在全球范围内采取可持续举措提高麻疹疫苗接种覆盖率外,缩小印度尼西亚麻疹疫苗接种率的城乡差距也很重要。解决印度尼西亚农村地区麻疹疫苗接种覆盖率较低的关键决定因素将有助于大幅改善印度尼西亚儿童健康趋势。本文提出了在印度尼西亚农村地区解决此类决定因素中的三个的举措:贫困、父母教育和获得熟练卫生工作者服务的机会。