Hobbs M, Marek L, Young A, Willing E, Dawson P, McIntyre P
Faculty of Health, Te Kaupeka Oranga, University of Canterbury, Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha, Christchurch, Otautahi, Aotearoa, New Zealand; GeoHealth Laboratory, Te Taiwhenua o te Hauora, Geospatial Research Institute Toi Hangarau, University of Canterbury, Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha, Christchurch, Otautahi, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
GeoHealth Laboratory, Te Taiwhenua o te Hauora, Geospatial Research Institute Toi Hangarau, University of Canterbury, Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha, Christchurch, Otautahi, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
Soc Sci Med. 2023 Oct;335:116228. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116228. Epub 2023 Sep 12.
Maternal influenza and pertussis immunisation is crucial for protecting mothers during pregnancy and their babies in the first weeks of life against severe disease. We examined geospatial variation in maternal immunisation coverage among pregnant women in Aotearoa New Zealand and its health equity implications.
We constructed a retrospective cohort including all pregnant women who delivered between 01 January 2013 and 31 December 2020 using administrative health datasets. Our outcomes were receipt of influenza or pertussis vaccine in any one of three relevant national databases (e.g. National Immunisation Register, Proclaims, or Pharmaceutical collection) during the eligible pregnancy.
Data from our retrospective cohort study show significant regional variation in maternal immunisation coverage for both influenza and pertussis from 2013 to 2020. Maximal coverage was around 50% in the best performing regions, which means that half of the women who were pregnant (183,737 women) were not protected. In addition, we found significant spatio-temporal variation and clustering of immunisation coverage. Our findings are interactively available to explore here: https://geohealthlab.shinyapps.io/hapumama/ CONCLUSION: Our study is one of the first to examine spatial variation in maternal vaccination coverage in pregnant women at a national level over space and time. This provides powerful tools to measure the impact of interventions to improve coverage at national and regional levels, with specific reference to inequities between ethnic groups, likely applicable to similar settings internationally.
孕期母亲接种流感疫苗和百日咳疫苗对于保护孕期母亲及其出生后几周内的婴儿免受严重疾病侵害至关重要。我们研究了新西兰奥特亚罗瓦地区孕妇的孕产妇免疫接种覆盖率的地理空间差异及其对健康公平性的影响。
我们利用行政卫生数据集构建了一个回顾性队列,纳入了2013年1月1日至2020年12月31日期间分娩的所有孕妇。我们的研究结果是在符合条件的孕期内,在三个相关国家数据库(如国家免疫登记册、公告或药品收集数据库)中的任何一个数据库中接种流感或百日咳疫苗。
我们回顾性队列研究的数据显示,2013年至2020年期间,流感和百日咳的孕产妇免疫接种覆盖率存在显著的地区差异。表现最佳的地区的最高覆盖率约为50%,这意味着一半的孕妇(183,737名妇女)未得到保护。此外,我们发现免疫接种覆盖率存在显著的时空差异和聚集现象。我们的研究结果可通过以下链接进行交互式探索:https://geohealthlab.shinyapps.io/hapumama/ 结论:我们的研究是首批在国家层面上研究孕妇孕产妇疫苗接种覆盖率的空间差异随时间和空间变化的研究之一。这提供了强大的工具来衡量国家和地区层面改善覆盖率的干预措施的影响,特别是针对不同种族群体之间的不平等现象,可能适用于国际上类似的情况。