Population, Policy and Practice Research and Teaching Department, UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, WC1N 1EH, UK.
Centre for Primary Care, Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Queen Mary University of London, E1 2AB, UK.
Vaccine. 2022 Aug 12;40(34):5016-5022. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2022.06.080. Epub 2022 Jul 13.
Delayed primary vaccination is one of the strongest predictors of subsequent incomplete immunisation. Identifying children at risk of such delay may enable targeting of interventions, thus decreasing vaccine-preventable illness.
To explore socio-demographic factors associated with delayed receipt of the Diphtheria, Tetanus and Pertussis (DTP) vaccine.
We included 1,782 children, born between 2000 and 2001, participating in the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) and resident in Wales, whose parents gave consent for linkage to National Community Child Health Database records at the age seven years contact. We examined child, maternal, family and area characteristics associated with delayed receipt of the first dose of the DTP vaccine.
98.6% received the first dose of DTP. The majority, 79.6% (n = 1,429) received it on time (between 8 and 12 weeks of age), 14.2% (n = 251) received it early (prior to 8 weeks of age) and 4.8% (n = 79) were delayed (after 12 weeks of age); 1.4% (n = 23) never received it. Delayed primary vaccination was more likely among children with older natural siblings (risk ratio 3.82, 95% confidence interval (1.97, 7.38)), children admitted to special/intensive care (3.15, (1.65, 5.99)), those whose birth weight was > 4Kg (2.02, (1.09, 3.73)) and boys (1.53, (1.01, 2.31)). There was a reduced risk of delayed vaccination with increasing maternal age (0.73, (0.53, 1.00) per 5 year increase) and for babies born to graduate mothers (0.27, (0.08, 0.90)).
Although the majority of infants were vaccinated in a timely manner, identification of infants at increased risk of early or delayed vaccination will enable targeting of interventions to facilitate timely immunisation. This is to our knowledge the first study exploring individual level socio-demographic factors associated with delayed primary vaccination in the UK and demonstrates the benefits of linking cohort data to routinely-collected child health data.
延迟初次接种是后续不完全免疫的最强预测因素之一。识别有此类延迟风险的儿童可能有助于针对干预措施,从而减少可预防的疫苗疾病。
探讨与白喉、破伤风和百日咳(DTP)疫苗延迟接种相关的社会人口因素。
我们纳入了 1782 名 2000 年至 2001 年间出生、参加千禧年队列研究(MCS)并居住在威尔士的儿童,其父母同意在 7 岁时将其链接到国家社区儿童健康数据库记录。我们检查了与儿童、产妇、家庭和地区特征相关的延迟接受 DTP 疫苗第一剂的情况。
98.6%的儿童接种了第一剂 DTP。大多数(n=1429)儿童按时接种(8-12 周龄),占 79.6%;14.2%(n=251)提前接种(8 周龄前);4.8%(n=79)延迟接种(12 周龄后);1.4%(n=23)从未接种过。有年龄较大的自然兄弟姐妹(风险比 3.82,95%置信区间(1.97,7.38))、被送入特殊/强化护理(3.15,(1.65,5.99))、出生体重>4kg(2.02,(1.09,3.73))和男孩(1.53,(1.01,2.31))的儿童更有可能延迟初次接种。随着产妇年龄的增加(每增加 5 岁,风险比为 0.73,(0.53,1.00)),以及产妇为研究生的婴儿(0.27,(0.08,0.90)),接种疫苗的风险降低。
尽管大多数婴儿按时接种疫苗,但识别有提前或延迟接种风险的婴儿将有助于针对干预措施,促进及时免疫接种。据我们所知,这是第一项在英国探索与儿童延迟初次接种相关的个体社会人口因素的研究,表明了将队列数据与常规收集的儿童健康数据相链接的益处。