Taneja Gunjan, Datta Eshita, Sapru Mahima, Johri Mira, Singh Kapil, Jandu Harkabir S, Das Shyamashree, Ray Arindam, Laserson Kayla, Dhawan Veena
Infectious Disease Cluster, India Country Office, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, New Delhi, IND.
Social Impact Practice, Evalueserve, New Delhi, IND.
Cureus. 2023 Feb 24;15(2):e35404. doi: 10.7759/cureus.35404. eCollection 2023 Feb.
Background While immunization programs across the world have made considerable progress, children and communities continue to be beyond the reach of healthcare services. Globally, they are now referred to as zero-dose (ZD) children (those who have not received a single dose of diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus-containing vaccine). Pre-COVID-19 pandemic analyses suggest that nearly 50% of vaccine-preventable deaths occur among ZD children. Two-thirds of these children live in extremely poor households suffering from multiple deprivations including lack of access to reproductive health services, water, and sanitation. Hence, ZD children have now been prioritized as a key cohort for identification and integration with the health systems as we build back from the pandemic. Methodology Extracting data from the last two National Family Health Survey (NFHS) rounds (NFHS 4, 2015-2016 and NFHS 5, 2019-2021), this study aims to ascertain the status of ZD children aged 12-23 months in India, the challenges, and the necessary action agenda going forward. Data were analyzed for equity determinants such as gender, place of residence, religion, birth order, caste, and mother's schooling. Key determinants included the change in ZD prevalence at the national, state, and district levels; variations across equity parameters and states with maximum improvements; and disparity across these indicators. A correlation analysis was also conducted to understand the nature of the association between ZD prevalence and critical maternal and child health indicators. Results The overall ZD prevalence between the two rounds was reduced by 4.1% (10.5-6.4%). A total of 26 states in the country reported a ZD prevalence of <10% in NFHS 5 compared to 18 in NFHS 4. In total, 324 districts reported a ZD prevalence of <5%, and 145 districts reported a prevalence of >10%. The equity parameters reflected a slow-footed reduction among ZD for girl children, across urban geographies, firstborn children, mothers with 12 or more years of schooling, and children in families with the highest wealth quintiles. A negative correlation accentuated between the two NFHS rounds was established between first-trimester registration, four or more antenatal visits, institutional deliveries, and ZD prevalence. Conclusions The findings point toward sustained improvement across key equity parameters, however, challenges do exist. Moreover, the impact of the pandemic on immunization programs across the globe and in India is bound to halt and reverse the progress and potentiate further inequities. It is thus imperative that continued and augmented efforts are continued to identify, integrate, and immunize ZD children, families, and communities.
背景 尽管全球免疫规划取得了显著进展,但儿童和社区仍然无法获得医疗服务。在全球范围内,他们现在被称为零剂次(ZD)儿童(即未接种过一剂含白喉、百日咳和破伤风疫苗的儿童)。2019年冠状病毒病大流行之前的分析表明,近50%的可通过疫苗预防的死亡发生在ZD儿童中。这些儿童中有三分之二生活在极端贫困家庭,遭受着包括无法获得生殖健康服务、水和卫生设施在内的多重剥夺。因此,在我们从大流行中恢复过来的过程中,ZD儿童现在已被列为识别并纳入卫生系统的关键人群。
方法 本研究从最近两轮全国家庭健康调查(NFHS)(2015 - 2016年的NFHS 4和2019 - 2021年的NFHS 5)中提取数据,旨在确定印度12至23个月大的ZD儿童的状况、面临的挑战以及未来必要的行动议程。对性别、居住地点、宗教、出生顺序、种姓和母亲受教育程度等公平决定因素的数据进行了分析。关键决定因素包括国家、邦和地区层面ZD患病率的变化;公平参数和改善最大的邦之间的差异;以及这些指标之间的差距。还进行了相关性分析,以了解ZD患病率与关键母婴健康指标之间关联的性质。
结果 两轮调查之间的总体ZD患病率降低了4.1%(从10.5%降至6.4%)。该国共有26个邦在NFHS 5中报告ZD患病率低于10%,而在NFHS 4中为18个邦。总共有324个地区报告ZD患病率低于5%,145个地区报告患病率高于10%。公平参数反映出,在女童、城市地区、头胎儿童、受教育12年及以上的母亲以及最富有五分之一家庭中的儿童中ZD患病率下降缓慢。在NFHS的两轮调查之间,早孕登记、四次或更多次产前检查、机构分娩与ZD患病率之间呈负相关。
结论 研究结果表明关键公平参数持续改善,但挑战依然存在。此外,全球和印度大流行对免疫规划的影响必然会阻碍并扭转进展,加剧进一步的不平等。因此,必须继续并加大努力,识别、纳入ZD儿童、家庭和社区并为其接种疫苗。