Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, California, United States of America.
Health Innovation Laboratory, Institute of Tropical Medicine "Alexander von Humboldt", Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
PLoS Med. 2023 Jan 17;20(1):e1004166. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004166. eCollection 2023 Jan.
Globally, access to life-saving vaccines has improved considerably in the past 5 decades. However, progress has started to slow down and even reverse in recent years. Understanding subnational heterogeneities in essential child immunization will be critical for closing the global vaccination gap.
We use vaccination information for over 220,000 children across 1,366 administrative regions in 43 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) from the most recent Demographic and Health Surveys. We estimate essential immunization coverage at the national and subnational levels and quantify socioeconomic inequalities in such coverage using adjusted concentration indices. Within- and between-country variations are summarized via the Theil index. We use local indicator of spatial association (LISA) statistics to identify clusters of administrative regions with high or low values. Finally, we estimate the number of missed vaccinations among children aged 15 to 35 months across all 43 countries and the types of vaccines most often missed. We show that national-level vaccination rates can conceal wide subnational heterogeneities. Large gaps in child immunization are found across West and Central Africa and in South Asia, particularly in regions of Angola, Chad, Nigeria, Guinea, and Afghanistan, where less than 10% of children are fully immunized. Furthermore, children living in these countries consistently lack all 4 basic vaccines included in the WHO's recommended schedule for young children. Across most countries, children from poorer households are less likely to be fully immunized. The main limitations include subnational estimates based on large administrative divisions for some countries and different periods of survey data collection.
The identified heterogeneities in essential childhood immunization, especially given that some regions consistently are underserved for all basic vaccines, can be used to inform the design and implementation of localized intervention programs aimed at eliminating child suffering and deaths from existing and novel vaccine-preventable diseases.
在过去的 50 年中,全球范围内获得救生疫苗的机会有了显著改善。然而,近年来进展开始放缓甚至逆转。了解基本儿童免疫接种的次国家级差异对于缩小全球疫苗接种差距至关重要。
我们使用了来自 43 个低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)最近的人口与健康调查中超过 220,000 名儿童的疫苗接种信息。我们在国家和次国家层面估计了基本免疫覆盖率,并使用调整后的集中指数量化了这种覆盖的社会经济不平等。使用 Theil 指数总结了国家内部和国家之间的差异。我们使用局部空间关联指标(LISA)统计数据来识别具有高或低值的行政区域聚类。最后,我们估计了所有 43 个国家中 15 至 35 个月大的儿童错过的疫苗接种数量以及最常错过的疫苗类型。我们发现,国家一级的疫苗接种率可能掩盖了广泛的次国家差异。在西非和中非以及南亚,特别是在安哥拉、乍得、尼日利亚、几内亚和阿富汗等地区,儿童免疫接种差距很大,那里不到 10%的儿童完全接种了疫苗。此外,生活在这些国家的儿童始终缺乏世界卫生组织推荐的幼儿基本疫苗。在大多数国家,来自较贫困家庭的儿童不太可能完全接种疫苗。主要限制因素包括一些国家基于较大的行政区域的次国家估计以及调查数据收集的不同时期。
基本儿童免疫接种方面的发现的差异,特别是一些地区始终未能提供所有基本疫苗,可用于为设计和实施本地化干预计划提供信息,旨在消除现有和新型疫苗可预防疾病导致的儿童痛苦和死亡。