Institute of Child Health, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Institute of Child Health, University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Front Public Health. 2022 Sep 8;10:898636. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.898636. eCollection 2022.
Nigerian urban slums have a high population of infants with suboptimal vaccination despite previous interventions. Older women traditionally play supervisory roles in infant care in Nigeria but their influence is untapped in infant vaccination. This study sought to determine if training of older women (≥35 years) in urban slum communities in Ibadan, South west Nigeria, and involving them in infant vaccination will improve infant vaccination timeliness and completion. This was a randomized experimental community study and pregnant women in their third trimester, residing in seven urban slum communities were randomized using their antenatal clinics (ANCs) into intervention (six ANCs) and control groups (six ANCs). The older women who will supervise the care of the infants of pregnant women in the intervention group had seven sessions of training on the importance of infant vaccination timeliness and completion. The vaccinations of the infants from both groups were compared from birth till 9 months. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and Chi square test at α = 0.05. There were 96 older women, 198 pregnant women (105 in intervention group and 93 controls) and 202 infants (109 in intervention group and 93 controls). Infants in the intervention group (67.9%) significantly had both timely and complete vaccinations compared with those in the control group (36.6%). Vaccines given at birth were the least timely in both groups. More infants whose older women caregiver were married had timely and complete vaccinations. Also, a higher proportion of male infants, low birth weight babies and infants with older women caregiver with at most two children had timely and completed vaccinations but these were not statistically significant. Training of older women caregivers improved infant vaccination timeliness and completion in these urban slum communities. This model may improve infant vaccination in other similar urban slum settings.
尼日利亚城市贫民窟的婴儿尽管之前已经进行过干预,但疫苗接种情况仍不理想。在尼日利亚,传统上老年妇女在婴儿护理中扮演监督角色,但她们在婴儿接种疫苗方面的影响力尚未得到挖掘。本研究旨在确定在尼日利亚西南部伊巴丹市的城市贫民窟社区中培训老年妇女(≥35 岁)并让她们参与婴儿接种疫苗是否会提高婴儿疫苗接种的及时性和完成率。这是一项随机对照社区研究,在伊巴丹的七个城市贫民窟社区中,居住在这些社区的处于妊娠晚期的孕妇根据其产前诊所(ANC)被随机分配到干预组(六个 ANC)和对照组(六个 ANC)。将监督干预组孕妇所照顾婴儿护理的老年妇女进行了七次关于婴儿疫苗接种及时性和完成率重要性的培训。对两组婴儿从出生到 9 个月的疫苗接种情况进行了比较。数据分析采用描述性统计和 χ2 检验,α 值为 0.05。共有 96 名老年妇女、198 名孕妇(干预组 105 名,对照组 93 名)和 202 名婴儿(干预组 109 名,对照组 93 名)。与对照组(36.6%)相比,干预组(67.9%)的婴儿疫苗接种更及时且完全。两组中出生时接种的疫苗及时性最差。更多其老年妇女照顾者已婚的婴儿有及时和完整的疫苗接种。此外,比例更高的男婴、低出生体重婴儿和老年妇女照顾者最多有两个孩子的婴儿也有及时和完整的疫苗接种,但这些差异没有统计学意义。培训老年妇女照顾者提高了这些城市贫民窟社区婴儿疫苗接种的及时性和完成率。这种模式可能会提高其他类似城市贫民窟环境中的婴儿疫苗接种率。