Mathew Joseph L
Advanced Pediatrics Centre, PGIMER, Chandigarh, India.
Indian Pediatr. 2012 Mar;49(3):203-23. doi: 10.1007/s13312-012-0063-z.
Despite a reduction in disease burden of vaccine preventable diseases through childhood immunization, considerable progress needs to be made in terms of ensuring efficiency and equity of vaccination coverage.
To conduct a systematic review to identify and explore factors associated with inequities in routine vaccination of children in India.
Publications reporting vaccination inequity were retrieved through a systematic search of Medline and websites of the WHO, UNICEF and demographic health surveys in India. No restrictions were applied in terms of study designs. The primary outcome measure was complete vaccination or immunization defined as per the standard WHO definition.
There were three nationwide data sets viz. the three National Family Health Surveys (NFHS), a research study conducted by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and a UNICEF coverage evaluation survey. In addition, several publications representing different population groups or geographic regions were available. A small number of publications were reanalyses of data from the NFHS series. There is considerable inequity in vaccination coverage in different states. Within states, traditionally poor performing states have greater inequities, although there are significant inequities even within better performing states. There are significant inequities in childhood vaccination based on various factors related to individual (gender, birth order), family (area of residence, wealth, parental education), demography (religion, caste), and the society (access to health-care, community literacy level) characteristics. Girls fare uniformly worse than boys and higher birth order infants have lower vaccination coverage. Urban infants have higher coverage than rural infants and those living in urban slums. There is an almost direct relationship between household wealth and vaccination rates. The vaccination rates are lower among infants with mothers having no or low literacy, and families with insufficient empowerment of women. Paternal literacy has an inconsistent positive relationship with infant vaccination. There is a relationship between religion and caste and childhood vaccination. Access to health services and other infrastructure, is associated with better vaccination coverage of infants. The precise impact of specific risk factors operating singly or in combination cannot be calculated from this systematic review.
This systematic review identifies and explores factors associated with inequity in childhood immunization in India; and provides information for urgent action to redress the imbalances.
尽管通过儿童免疫接种降低了疫苗可预防疾病的疾病负担,但在确保疫苗接种覆盖率的效率和公平性方面仍需取得相当大的进展。
进行系统评价,以识别和探讨与印度儿童常规疫苗接种不平等相关的因素。
通过系统检索Medline以及世界卫生组织、联合国儿童基金会的网站和印度人口健康调查,获取报告疫苗接种不平等情况的出版物。在研究设计方面没有限制。主要结局指标是按照世界卫生组织标准定义的全程接种或免疫。
有三个全国性数据集,即三次全国家庭健康调查(NFHS)、印度医学研究理事会(ICMR)进行的一项研究以及联合国儿童基金会的覆盖率评估调查。此外,还有一些代表不同人群或地理区域的出版物。少数出版物是对NFHS系列数据的重新分析。不同邦的疫苗接种覆盖率存在相当大的不平等。在各邦内部,传统上表现较差的邦不平等情况更严重,不过即使在表现较好的邦内也存在显著的不平等。基于与个体(性别、出生顺序)、家庭(居住地区、财富、父母教育程度)、人口统计学(宗教、种姓)和社会(获得医疗保健、社区识字水平)特征相关的各种因素,儿童疫苗接种存在显著不平等。女孩的情况普遍比男孩差,出生顺序较高的婴儿疫苗接种覆盖率较低。城市婴儿的接种覆盖率高于农村婴儿以及居住在城市贫民窟的婴儿。家庭财富与疫苗接种率之间几乎存在直接关系。母亲文盲或识字率低以及妇女赋权不足的家庭中婴儿的疫苗接种率较低。父亲的识字率与婴儿疫苗接种之间存在不一致的正相关关系。宗教和种姓与儿童疫苗接种之间存在关联。获得医疗服务和其他基础设施与婴儿更好的疫苗接种覆盖率相关。无法从本系统评价中计算出单个或组合存在的特定风险因素的确切影响。
本系统评价识别并探讨了与印度儿童免疫接种不平等相关的因素;并为纠正这种不平衡的紧急行动提供了信息。