Masresha Balcha Girma, Luce Richard, Shibeshi Messeret Eshetu, Ntsama Bernard, N'Diaye Abubacar, Chakauya Jethro, Poy Alain, Mihigo Richard
World Health Organization, Regional Office for Africa, Cite de Djoue, Brazzaville, Congo.
World Health Organization, Inter-Country Support Team for West Africa, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.
Pan Afr Med J. 2020 Sep 18;37(Suppl 1):12. doi: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.37.12.26107. eCollection 2020.
following the declaration of the COVID-19 pandemic on 11 March 2020, countries started implementing strict control measures, health workers were re-deployed and health facilities re-purposed to assist COVID-19 control efforts. These measures, along with the public concerns of getting COVID-19, led to a decline in the utilization of regular health services including immunization.
we reviewed the administrative routine immunization data from 15 African countries for the period from January 2018 to June 2020 to analyze the trends in the monthly number of children vaccinated with specific antigens, and compare the changes in the first three months of the COVID-19 pandemic.
thirteen of the 15 countries showed a decline in the monthly average number of vaccine doses provided, with 6 countries having more than 10% decline. Nine countries had a lower monthly mean of recipients of first dose measles vaccination in the second quarter of 2020 as compared to the first quarter. Guinea, Nigeria, Ghana, Angola, Gabon, and South Sudan experienced a drop in the monthly number of children vaccinated for DPT3 and/or MCV1 of greater than 2 standard deviations at some point in the second quarter of 2020 as compared to the mean for the months January-June of 2018 and 2019.
countries with lower immunization coverage in the pre-COVID period experienced larger declines in the number of children vaccinated immediately after the COVID-19 pandemic was declared. Prolonged and significant reduction in the number of children vaccinated poses a serious risk for outbreaks such as measles. Countries should monitor coverage trends at national and subnational levels, and undertake catch-up vaccination activities to ensure that children who have missed scheduled vaccines receive them at the earliest possible time.
自2020年3月11日宣布新冠疫情大流行以来,各国开始实施严格的管控措施,医护人员被重新调配,医疗机构也被重新调整用途以协助新冠疫情防控工作。这些措施,再加上公众对感染新冠病毒的担忧,导致包括免疫接种在内的常规医疗服务利用率下降。
我们回顾了15个非洲国家在2018年1月至2020年6月期间的行政常规免疫接种数据,以分析每月接种特定抗原疫苗的儿童数量趋势,并比较新冠疫情大流行前三个月的变化情况。
15个国家中有13个国家的每月平均疫苗接种剂量有所下降,其中6个国家下降超过10%。与第一季度相比,2020年第二季度有9个国家的首剂麻疹疫苗接种者月均数量减少。与2018年1月至6月以及2019年1月至6月的月均值相比,几内亚、尼日利亚、加纳、安哥拉、加蓬和南苏丹在2020年第二季度的某个时间点,接种三联疫苗(DPT3)和/或第一剂脑膜炎球菌结合疫苗(MCV1)的儿童月接种数量下降超过2个标准差。
在新冠疫情之前免疫接种覆盖率较低的国家,在宣布新冠疫情大流行后,立即接种疫苗的儿童数量下降幅度更大。儿童接种疫苗数量长期且大幅减少会带来麻疹等疾病爆发的严重风险。各国应在国家和次国家层面监测覆盖率趋势,并开展补种活动,以确保错过计划疫苗接种的儿童尽早接种。