MCHIP-Maternal and Child Health Integrated Program, John Snow, Inc. , Washington, DC , USA.
The Ministry of Health, Dili, Timor-Leste.
Glob Health Sci Pract. 2013 Nov 14;1(3):417-27. doi: 10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00115. eCollection 2013 Nov.
Timor-Leste's immunization coverage is among the poorest in Asia. The 2009/2010 Demographic and Health Survey found that complete vaccination coverage in urban areas, at 47.7%, was lower than in rural areas, at 54.1%. The city of Dili, the capital of Timor-Leste, had even lower coverage (43.4%) than the national urban average.
To better understand the service- and user-related factors that account for low vaccination coverage in urban Dili, despite high literacy rates and relatively good access to immunization services and communication media.
A mixed-methods (mainly qualitative) study, conducted in 5 urban sub-districts of Dili, involved in-depth interviews with18 Ministry of Health staff and 6 community leaders, 83 observations of immunization encounters, 37 exit interviews with infants' caregivers at 11 vaccination sites, and 11 focus group discussions with 70 caregivers of vaccination-eligible children ages 6 to 23 months.
The main reasons for low vaccination rates in urban Dili included caregivers' knowledge, attitudes, and perceptions as well as barriers at immunization service sites. Other important factors were access to services and information, particularly in the city periphery, health workers' attitudes and practices, caregivers' fears of side effects, conflicting priorities, large family size, lack of support from husbands and paternal grandmothers, and seasonal migration.
Good access to health facilities or health services does not necessarily translate into uptake of immunization services. The reasons are complex and multifaceted but in general relate to the health services' insufficient understanding of and attention to their clients' needs. Almost all families in Dili would be motivated to have their children immunized if services were convenient, reliable, friendly, and informative.
东帝汶的免疫接种覆盖率在亚洲属于较低水平。2009/2010 年人口与健康调查发现,城市地区的完全疫苗接种覆盖率为 47.7%,低于农村地区的 54.1%。东帝汶首都帝力市的覆盖率甚至更低(43.4%),低于全国城市平均水平。
尽管东帝汶城市地区的识字率较高,且相对容易获得免疫接种服务和传播媒介,但为了更好地了解城市帝力导致疫苗接种率低的服务和用户相关因素。
本项在帝力市 5 个城区开展的混合方法(主要为定性)研究包括:深入访谈 18 名卫生部工作人员和 6 名社区领导人,观察 83 次免疫接种情况,在 11 个疫苗接种点对 111 名婴儿照料者进行 37 次接种后访谈,以及对 70 名符合条件的 6-23 月龄儿童的照料者进行 11 次焦点小组讨论。
城市帝力疫苗接种率低的主要原因包括照料者的知识、态度和看法,以及免疫接种服务点的障碍。其他重要因素包括服务和信息的获取,特别是在城市周边地区,卫生工作者的态度和做法,照料者对副作用的恐惧,冲突的优先事项,家庭规模大,缺乏丈夫和祖母的支持,以及季节性迁移。
良好的卫生设施或卫生服务的可及性并不一定转化为对免疫服务的利用。原因复杂多样,但总体上与卫生服务机构对客户需求的理解和关注不足有关。如果服务方便、可靠、友好且信息丰富,帝力几乎所有家庭都有动力让孩子接受免疫接种。