Merten Sonja, Martin Hilber Adriane, Biaggi Christina, Secula Florence, Bosch-Capblanch Xavier, Namgyal Pem, Hombach Joachim
Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Initiative for Vaccines Research, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2015 Aug 28;10(8):e0135222. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0135222. eCollection 2015.
Using meta-ethnographic methods, we conducted a systematic review of qualitative research to understand gender-related reasons at individual, family, community and health facility levels why millions of children in low and middle income countries are still not reached by routine vaccination programmes. A systematic search of Medline, Embase, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, ERIC, Anthropological Lit, CSA databases, IBSS, ISI Web of Knowledge, JSTOR, Soc Index and Sociological Abstracts was conducted. Key words were built around the themes of immunization, vaccines, health services, health behaviour, and developing countries. Only papers, which reported on in-depth qualitative data, were retained. Twenty-five qualitative studies, which investigated barriers to routine immunisation, were included in the review. These studies were conducted between 1982 and 2012; eighteen were published after 2000. The studies represent a wide range of low- to middle income countries including some that have well known coverage challenges. We found that women's low social status manifests on every level as a barrier to accessing vaccinations: access to education, income, as well as autonomous decision-making about time and resource allocation were evident barriers. Indirectly, women's lower status made them vulnerable to blame and shame in case of childhood illness, partly reinforcing access problems, but partly increasing women's motivation to use every means to keep their children healthy. Yet in settings where gender discrimination exists most strongly, increasing availability and information may not be enough to reach the under immunised. Programmes must actively be designed to include mitigation measures to facilitate women's access to immunisation services if we hope to improve immunisation coverage. Gender inequality needs to be addressed on structural, community and household levels if the number of unvaccinated children is to substantially decrease.
我们采用元民族志方法,对定性研究进行了系统综述,以了解在低收入和中等收入国家,为何数百万儿童仍未被纳入常规疫苗接种计划,这一现象在个人、家庭、社区和卫生机构层面上与性别相关的原因。我们对医学文献数据库(Medline)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、考科蓝图书馆、教育资源信息中心数据库(ERIC)、人类学文献数据库、剑桥科学文摘数据库(CSA)、国际社会科学文献索引数据库(IBSS)、科学网(ISI Web of Knowledge)、JSTOR全文数据库、社会科学索引数据库和社会学文摘数据库进行了系统检索。关键词围绕免疫接种、疫苗、卫生服务、健康行为以及发展中国家等主题构建。仅保留了报告深入定性数据的论文。本综述纳入了25项调查常规免疫接种障碍的定性研究。这些研究开展于1982年至2012年之间;其中18项在2000年之后发表。这些研究涵盖了广泛的低收入和中等收入国家,包括一些存在众所周知的疫苗接种覆盖率挑战的国家。我们发现,妇女的低社会地位在各个层面上都表现为获取疫苗接种的障碍:获得教育、收入以及对时间和资源分配的自主决策权方面存在明显障碍。间接而言,妇女地位较低使她们在儿童患病时容易受到指责和羞辱,这在一定程度上强化了获取疫苗的问题,但也部分增强了妇女想尽一切办法保持孩子健康的动力。然而,在性别歧视最为严重的环境中,增加疫苗供应和信息可能不足以覆盖未充分接种疫苗的人群。如果我们希望提高疫苗接种覆盖率,就必须积极设计相关计划,纳入缓解措施,以便利妇女获得免疫接种服务。如果要大幅减少未接种疫苗儿童的数量,就需要在结构、社区和家庭层面解决性别不平等问题。