Helen Keller International-Tanzania, Dar es Salam, Tanzania.
PLoS One. 2013;8(3):e58629. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0058629. Epub 2013 Mar 11.
Tanzania has conducted a national twice-yearly Vitamin A supplementation (VAS) campaign since 2001. Administrative coverage rates based on tally sheets consistently report >90% coverage; however the accuracy of these rates are uncertain due to potential errors in tally sheets and their aggregation, incomplete or inaccurate reporting from distribution sites, and underestimating the target population.
The post event coverage survey in Mainland Tanzania sought to validate tally-sheet based national coverage estimates of VAS and deworming for the June 2010 mass distribution round, and to characterize children missed by the national campaign.
WHO/EPI randomized cross-sectional cluster sampling methodology was adapted for this study, using 30 clusters by 40 individuals (n = 1200), in addition to key informant interviews. Households with children 6-59 months of age were included in the study (12-59 months for deworming analysis). Chi-squared tests and logistic regression analysis were used to test differences between children reached and not reached by VAS. Data was collected within six weeks of the June 2010 round.
A total of 1203 children, 58 health workers, 30 village leaders and 45 community health workers were sampled. Preschool VAS coverage was 65% (95% CI: 62.7-68.1), approximately 30% lower than tally-sheet coverage estimates. Factors associated with not receiving VAS were urban residence [OR = 3.31; p = 0.01], caretakers who did not hear about the campaign [OR = 48.7; p<0.001], and Muslim households [OR<3.25; p<0.01]. There were no significant differences in VAS coverage by child sex or age, or maternal age or education.
Coverage estimation for vitamin A supplementation programs is one of most powerful indicators of program success. National VAS coverage based on a tally-sheet system overestimated VAS coverage by ∼30%. There is a need for representative population-based coverage surveys to complement and validate tally-sheet estimates.
坦桑尼亚自 2001 年以来每年进行两次维生素 A 补充剂(VAS)活动。基于点名表的行政覆盖率持续报告覆盖率超过 90%;然而,由于点名表及其汇总中的潜在错误、分发点的不完全或不准确报告以及低估目标人群,这些比率的准确性无法确定。
坦桑尼亚大陆的事后覆盖调查旨在验证基于点名表的全国 VAS 和驱虫覆盖估计数,用于 2010 年 6 月大规模分发回合,并描述国家运动遗漏的儿童。
世界卫生组织/流行病规划司采用了随机横断面聚类抽样方法,在研究中使用了 30 个由 40 人组成的聚类(n=1200),此外还进行了关键信息人员访谈。研究纳入了 6-59 个月龄的儿童(6-59 个月用于驱虫分析)。卡方检验和逻辑回归分析用于检验 VAS 覆盖的儿童和未覆盖的儿童之间的差异。数据是在 2010 年 6 月轮次结束后的六周内收集的。
共抽取了 1203 名儿童、58 名卫生工作者、30 名村长和 45 名社区卫生工作者。学龄前 VAS 覆盖率为 65%(95%置信区间:62.7-68.1),比点名表覆盖率估计值低约 30%。未接受 VAS 的相关因素包括城市居住[比值比(OR)=3.31;p=0.01]、未听说过该运动的照顾者[OR=48.7;p<0.001]和穆斯林家庭[OR<3.25;p<0.01]。VAS 覆盖率与儿童性别或年龄、母亲年龄或教育程度无关。
维生素 A 补充剂方案的覆盖估计是方案成功的最有力指标之一。基于点名表系统的全国 VAS 覆盖率高估了约 30%的 VAS 覆盖率。需要进行具有代表性的基于人群的覆盖调查,以补充和验证点名表估计数。