Shearer Freya M, Moyes Catherine L, Pigott David M, Brady Oliver J, Marinho Fatima, Deshpande Aniruddha, Longbottom Joshua, Browne Annie J, Kraemer Moritz U G, O'Reilly Kathleen M, Hombach Joachim, Yactayo Sergio, de Araújo Valdelaine E M, da Nóbrega Aglaêr A, Mosser Jonathan F, Stanaway Jeffrey D, Lim Stephen S, Hay Simon I, Golding Nick, Reiner Robert C
Big Data Institute, Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Information and Discovery, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Big Data Institute, Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Information and Discovery, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2017 Nov;17(11):1209-1217. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(17)30419-X. Epub 2017 Aug 16.
Substantial outbreaks of yellow fever in Angola and Brazil in the past 2 years, combined with global shortages in vaccine stockpiles, highlight a pressing need to assess present control strategies. The aims of this study were to estimate global yellow fever vaccination coverage from 1970 through to 2016 at high spatial resolution and to calculate the number of individuals still requiring vaccination to reach population coverage thresholds for outbreak prevention.
For this adjusted retrospective analysis, we compiled data from a range of sources (eg, WHO reports and health-service-provider registeries) reporting on yellow fever vaccination activities between May 1, 1939, and Oct 29, 2016. To account for uncertainty in how vaccine campaigns were targeted, we calculated three population coverage values to encompass alternative scenarios. We combined these data with demographic information and tracked vaccination coverage through time to estimate the proportion of the population who had ever received a yellow fever vaccine for each second level administrative division across countries at risk of yellow fever virus transmission from 1970 to 2016.
Overall, substantial increases in vaccine coverage have occurred since 1970, but notable gaps still exist in contemporary coverage within yellow fever risk zones. We estimate that between 393·7 million and 472·9 million people still require vaccination in areas at risk of yellow fever virus transmission to achieve the 80% population coverage threshold recommended by WHO; this represents between 43% and 52% of the population within yellow fever risk zones, compared with between 66% and 76% of the population who would have required vaccination in 1970.
Our results highlight important gaps in yellow fever vaccination coverage, can contribute to improved quantification of outbreak risk, and help to guide planning of future vaccination efforts and emergency stockpiling.
The Rhodes Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Wellcome Trust, the National Library of Medicine of the National Institutes of Health, the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.
过去两年安哥拉和巴西爆发大规模黄热病疫情,加之全球疫苗储备短缺,凸显了评估当前防控策略的迫切需求。本研究旨在以高空间分辨率估算1970年至2016年全球黄热病疫苗接种覆盖率,并计算为达到预防疫情所需的人群覆盖率阈值仍需接种疫苗的人数。
在这项校正后的回顾性分析中,我们汇总了一系列来源(如世卫组织报告和卫生服务提供者登记册)的数据,这些数据报告了1939年5月1日至2016年10月29日期间的黄热病疫苗接种活动。为了考虑疫苗接种活动目标设定方式的不确定性,我们计算了三个群体覆盖率值,以涵盖不同情况。我们将这些数据与人口统计信息相结合,并随时间追踪疫苗接种覆盖率,以估算1970年至2016年期间有黄热病病毒传播风险的各国二级行政区中曾接种过黄热病疫苗的人群比例。
总体而言,自1970年以来疫苗接种覆盖率大幅提高,但黄热病风险区域目前的覆盖率仍存在显著差距。我们估计,在有黄热病病毒传播风险的地区,仍有3.937亿至4.729亿人需要接种疫苗,以达到世卫组织建议的80%人群覆盖率阈值;这占黄热病风险区域人口的43%至52%,而在1970年需要接种疫苗的人口比例为66%至76%。
我们的研究结果凸显了黄热病疫苗接种覆盖率方面的重要差距,有助于更好地量化疫情风险,并有助于指导未来疫苗接种工作规划和应急储备。
罗德奖学金信托基金、比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会、惠康信托基金会、美国国立卫生研究院国家医学图书馆、欧盟“地平线2020”研究与创新计划。