Murhekar Manoj V, Dutta Srihari, Kapoor Ambujam Nair, Bitragunta Sailaja, Dodum Raja, Ghosh Pramit, Swamy Karumanagounder Kolanda, Mukhopadhyay Kalyanranjan, Ningombam Somorjit, Parmar Kamlesh, Ravishankar Devegowda, Singh Balraj, Singh Varsha, Sisodiya Rajesh, Subramanian Ramaratnam, Takum Tana
National Institute of Epidemiology, Indian Council of Medical Research, R127, Tamil Nadu Housing Board, Ayapakkam, Ambattur, Chennai 600 077, India .
United Nations Children's Fund, New Delhi, India .
Bull World Health Organ. 2013 Dec 1;91(12):906-13. doi: 10.2471/BLT.13.119974. Epub 2013 Sep 9.
To estimate the proportion of time the vaccines in the cold-chain system in India are exposed to temperatures of < 0 or > 8 °C.
In each of 10 states, the largest district and the one most distant from the state capital were selected for study. Four boxes, each containing an electronic temperature recorder and two vials of diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus vaccine, were placed in the state or regional vaccine store for each study state. Two of these boxes were then shipped - one per facility - towards the two most peripheral health facilities where vaccine was stored in each study district. The boxes were shipped, handled and stored as if they were routine vaccine supplies.
In state, regional and district vaccine stores and peripheral health facilities, respectively, the temperatures in the boxes exceeded 8 °C for 14.3%, 13.2%, 8.3% and 14.7% of their combined storage times and fell below 0 °C for 1.5%, 0.2%, 0.6% and 10.5% of these times. The boxes also spent about 18% and 7% of their combined times in transit at < 0 and > 8 °C, respectively. In shake tests conducted at the end of the study, two thirds of the vaccine vials in the boxes showed evidence of freezing.
While exposure to temperatures above 8 °C occurred at every level of vaccine storage, exposure to subzero temperatures was only frequent during vaccine storage at peripheral facilities and vaccine transportation. Systematic efforts are needed to improve temperature monitoring in the cold-chain system in India.
估算印度冷链系统中的疫苗暴露于低于0℃或高于8℃温度下的时间比例。
在10个邦中,每个邦选取最大的区以及距离邦首府最远的区进行研究。在每个研究邦的邦或地区疫苗储存库中放置四个盒子,每个盒子装有一个电子温度记录仪和两瓶白喉、百日咳和破伤风疫苗。然后将其中两个盒子运往每个研究区储存疫苗的两个最外围卫生机构,每个机构一个盒子。这些盒子的运输、处理和储存方式与常规疫苗供应相同。
在邦、地区和区级疫苗储存库以及外围卫生机构中,盒子内温度超过8℃的时间分别占其总储存时间的14.3%、13.2%、8.3%和14.7%,温度低于0℃的时间分别占这些时间的1.5%、0.2%、0.6%和10.5%。盒子在运输过程中,温度低于0℃和高于8℃的时间分别约占总运输时间的18%和7%。在研究结束时进行的摇晃试验中,盒子里三分之二的疫苗瓶显示有冻结迹象。
虽然在疫苗储存的各个环节都出现了疫苗暴露于8℃以上温度的情况,但仅在疫苗于外围机构储存和运输期间,暴露于零下温度的情况较为频繁。需要做出系统性努力来改善印度冷链系统中的温度监测。