Consultant on Immunization Policy, Mercer Island, WA, United States.
Division of Bacterial Diseases, NCIRD, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, United States.
Vaccine. 2013 Dec 27;31 Suppl 9:J15-20. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2013.03.045.
The China GAVI Hepatitis B Immunization Project was initiated in 2002 with the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between GAVI and the Government of China. The Project was one of the three (China, India, and Indonesia) GAVI-initiated special projects done to support countries too large to receive full GAVI support for hepatitis B vaccine and safe injections. The Project in China was designed by the Chinese Government and partners to deliver free hepatitis B vaccine and safe injections to all newborns in the 12 Western Provinces and Poverty Counties in 10 Provinces of Central China (1301 Counties with approximately 5.6 million births per year), eliminating the gap in immunization coverage between wealthier and poorer regions of China. The project budget (USD 76 million) was equally shared by GAVI and the Chinese Government. Initially planned for 5 years, two no cost extensions extended the project to 2011. Although China produced hepatitis B vaccine, before the project the vaccine was sold to parents who were also charged a "user fee" for the syringe and vaccine administration. Basic Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI) vaccines such as BCG, DTP, Polio, and measles vaccines were provided free to parents, although they were charged a user fee. Vaccines were sold by China CDC Offices at provincial, prefecture, county level and township hospitals, and village doctors received a substantial portion of their income from the sale of hepatitis B and other vaccines. The result of charging for hepatitis B vaccine was that coverage was relatively high in Eastern and wealthier counties in Central China (80-90%), but was much lower (40%) in Western China and Poverty Counties where parents could not afford the vaccine. The Project was administered by the China MOH and China CDC EPI program, and two Project Co-managers, one from the Chinese Government and the other an international assignee, were chosen. The project had an oversight Operational Advisory Group composed of the Chinese Government, WHO, UNICEF, and GAVI. The initial targets of the project as delineated in the initial MOU for the Project areas (HepB3 coverage will reach 85% at the county level, >75% of newborns at the county level will receive the first dose of hepatitis B within 24h of birth, and all immunization injections will be with auto disable [AD] syringes) were substantially exceeded. The differential in vaccine coverage between wealthier and poorer parts of China was eliminated contributing to a great improvement in equity. With additional contributions of the Chinese Government the Project was accomplished substantially under budget allowing for additional catch up immunization of children under 15 years of age. More than 5 million health workers were trained in how to deliver hepatitis B vaccine, timely birth dose (TBD), and safe injections, and public awareness of hepatitis B and its prevention rose significantly. TBD coverage was expedited by concurrent efforts to have women deliver in township clinics and district hospitals instead of at home. The effective management of the Project, with a Project office sitting within the China EPI and an Operational Advisory Group for oversight, could serve as a model for other GAVI projects worldwide. Most importantly, the carrier rate in Chinese children less than 5 years of age has fallen to 1%, from a level of 10% before the inception of the Project. Liver cancer, one of the major cancer killers in China (250,000-300,000 annual estimated deaths), will dramatically decline as immunized cohorts of Chinese children age. While hepatitis C and non-alcoholic liver disease also exist in China and can lead to liver cancer and cirrhosis, the majority of liver disease in China is hepatitis B related and therefore preventable. The authors believe that China's success in preventing hepatitis B is one of the greatest public health achievements of the 21st century. Work remains to be done in several key areas. There are still pockets of home births in rural provinces where a TBD is difficult to deliver, and China is strengthening its policy of screening pregnant women for HBsAg and delivering HBIG plus vaccine to newborns of HBV carrier mothers. Approximately 10% of the adult population of China remain chronic carriers of hepatitis B virus and cannot be helped by the vaccine, so prevention of liver cancer and cirrhosis in those groups remains a future challenge for China.
中国全球疫苗免疫联盟乙肝疫苗免疫接种项目于 2002 年启动,当时 GAVI 与中国政府签署了一份谅解备忘录。该项目是 GAVI 发起的三个特别项目之一,旨在支持那些因规模过大而无法获得 GAVI 全面乙肝疫苗和安全注射支持的国家,另外两个国家是印度和印度尼西亚。中国政府和合作伙伴设计了该项目,旨在为中国中西部 12 个省份和 10 个中部省份的贫困县所有新生儿提供免费乙肝疫苗和安全注射,消除了中国贫富地区免疫接种覆盖率的差距。该项目预算(7600 万美元)由 GAVI 和中国政府平均分担。最初计划为期 5 年,但两次免费延期将项目延长至 2011 年。尽管中国生产乙肝疫苗,但在该项目之前,疫苗是出售给父母的,而且注射器和疫苗接种管理还要收取“用户费”。基本扩大免疫规划(EPI)疫苗,如卡介苗、百白破疫苗、脊髓灰质炎疫苗和麻疹疫苗,是免费提供给父母的,尽管他们要收取用户费。疫苗由中国疾病预防控制中心省级、地市级、县级办公室和乡镇医院销售,乡村医生的大部分收入来自乙肝和其他疫苗的销售。乙肝疫苗收费的结果是,在东部和中部较富裕的省份(约 80-90%),疫苗接种率相对较高,但在西部和贫困县(父母负担不起疫苗费用),疫苗接种率要低得多(约 40%)。该项目由中国卫生部和中国疾病预防控制中心 EPI 项目管理,任命了两名项目共同管理者,一名来自中国政府,另一名是国际派遣人员。该项目有一个监督业务咨询小组,由中国政府、世界卫生组织、联合国儿童基金会和 GAVI 组成。该项目最初的目标是在项目地区(乙肝疫苗 3 覆盖率将达到县级 85%,县级 85%以上的新生儿在出生后 24 小时内将接受第一剂乙肝疫苗,所有免疫接种注射将使用自动失效[AD]注射器),这些目标都大大超过了。中国贫富地区疫苗接种率的差异已经消除,这为公平性的提高做出了巨大贡献。由于中国政府的额外捐款,该项目的完成大大低于预算,允许为 15 岁以下的儿童进行额外的补种。超过 500 万卫生工作者接受了如何提供乙肝疫苗、及时出生剂量(TBD)和安全注射的培训,公众对乙肝及其预防的认识显著提高。通过同时努力让妇女在乡镇诊所和地区医院分娩而不是在家里分娩,加快了 TBD 的覆盖速度。该项目的有效管理,项目办公室设在中国 EPI 内,并设有一个监督业务咨询小组,可为全球其他 GAVI 项目提供模式。最重要的是,中国 5 岁以下儿童的携带率已从项目启动前的 10%降至 1%。在中国(每年估计有 25 万至 30 万例死亡),作为乙肝疫苗接种人群的中国儿童年龄增长,肝癌这一中国主要癌症杀手之一的发病率将大幅下降。虽然丙型肝炎和非酒精性肝病也存在于中国,并可能导致肝癌和肝硬化,但中国大多数肝病与乙肝有关,因此是可以预防的。作者认为,中国在预防乙肝方面取得的成功是 21 世纪最伟大的公共卫生成就之一。在几个关键领域仍有工作要做。在农村省份仍有一些家庭分娩的情况,很难提供 TBD,中国正在加强对孕妇进行乙肝表面抗原筛查,并向乙肝病毒携带者母亲的新生儿提供乙肝免疫球蛋白加疫苗的政策。中国约 10%的成年人口仍然是慢性乙肝病毒携带者,无法通过疫苗获得帮助,因此预防这些人群的肝癌和肝硬化仍然是中国未来的挑战。