Department of Community Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University Putra Malaysia, Serdang, Malaysia.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Jul 28;21(1):1475. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-11466-5.
Vaccine preventable diseases are still the most common cause of childhood mortality, with an estimated 3 million deaths every year, mainly in Africa and Asia. An estimate of 29% deaths among children aged 1-59 months were due to vaccine preventable diseases. Despite the benefits of childhood immunisation, routine vaccination coverage for all recommended Expanded Programme on Immunization vaccines has remained poor in some African countries, such as Nigeria (31%), Ethiopia (43%), Uganda (55%) and Ghana (57%). The aim of this study is to collate evidence on the factors that influence childhood immunisation uptake in Africa, as well as to provide evidence for future researchers in developing, implementing and evaluating intervention among African populations which will improve childhood immunisation uptake.
We conducted a systematic review of articles on the factors influencing under-five childhood immunisation uptake in Africa. This was achieved by using various keywords and searching multiple databases (Medline, PubMed, CINAHL and Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection) dating back from inception to 2020.
Out of 18,708 recorded citations retrieved, 10,396 titles were filtered and 324 titles remained. These 324 abstracts were screened leading to 51 included studies. Statistically significant factors found to influence childhood immunisation uptake were classified into modifiable and non-modifiable factors and were further categorised into different groups based on relevance. The modifiable factors include obstetric factors, maternal knowledge, maternal attitude, self-efficacy and maternal outcome expectation, whereas non-modifiable factors were sociodemographic factors of parent and child, logistic and administration factors.
Different factors were found to influence under-five childhood immunisation uptake among parents in Africa. Immunisation health education intervention among pregnant women, focusing on the significant findings from this systematic review, would hopefully improve childhood immunisation uptake in African countries with poor coverage rates.
疫苗可预防疾病仍然是儿童死亡的最常见原因,估计每年有 300 万人死亡,主要在非洲和亚洲。1 至 59 个月儿童中,估计有 29%的死亡是由疫苗可预防疾病引起的。尽管儿童免疫接种有诸多好处,但在一些非洲国家,如尼日利亚(31%)、埃塞俄比亚(43%)、乌干达(55%)和加纳(57%),常规扩大免疫规划疫苗接种覆盖率仍然很低。本研究旨在整理影响非洲儿童免疫接种率的因素的证据,并为未来在非洲人群中开展、实施和评估干预措施的研究人员提供证据,以提高儿童免疫接种率。
我们对影响非洲五岁以下儿童免疫接种率的因素进行了系统评价。我们使用了各种关键词,并在多个数据库(Medline、PubMed、CINAHL 和心理学与行为科学收藏)中进行了搜索,这些数据库的回溯时间从建立到 2020 年。
从检索到的 18708 条记录中,过滤了 10396 个标题,剩下 324 个标题。对这 324 个摘要进行了筛选,最终纳入了 51 项研究。发现影响儿童免疫接种率的统计学上显著的因素分为可改变因素和不可改变因素,并根据相关性进一步分为不同的组。可改变因素包括产科因素、母亲知识、母亲态度、自我效能和母亲结果期望,而不可改变因素则是父母和孩子的社会人口因素、物流和管理因素。
不同的因素被发现会影响非洲父母对五岁以下儿童的免疫接种率。在非洲国家,对孕妇进行免疫接种健康教育干预,重点关注本系统评价中的重要发现,有望提高儿童免疫接种率,这些国家的覆盖率较低。