Project HOPE Ethiopia Country Office, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
School of Pharmacy, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2024 Jun 4;111(1):196-204. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.23-0816. Print 2024 Jul 3.
Despite increments in immunization coverage over the past decades, substantial inequality due to wealth status has persisted in Ethiopia. This study aimed to decompose the concentration index into the contributions of individual factors to socioeconomic inequalities of childhood vaccination dropout in remote and underserved settings in Ethiopia by using a decomposition approach. A wealth index was developed by reducing 41 variables related to women's household living standards into nine factors by using principal component analysis. The components were further totaled into a composite score and divided into five quintiles (poorest, poorer, middle, richer, and richest). Vaccination dropout was calculated as the proportion of children who did not get the pentavalent-3 vaccine among those who received the pentavalent-1 vaccine. The concentration index was used to estimate socioeconomic inequalities in childhood vaccination dropout, which was then decomposed to examine the factors contributing to socioeconomic inequalities in vaccination dropout. The overall concentration index was -0.179 (P <0.01), confirming the concentration of vaccination dropout among the lowest wealth strata. The decomposition analyses showed that wealth index significantly contributed to inequalities in vaccination dropout (49.7%). Place of residence also explained -16.2% of the inequality. Skilled birth attendance and availability of a health facility in the kebele (the lowest administrative government structure) also significantly contributed (33.6% and 12.6%, respectively) to inequalities in vaccination dropout. Wealth index, place of residence, skilled birth attendance, and availability of a health facility in the kebele largely contributed to the concentration of vaccination dropout among the lowest wealth strata. Policymakers should address vaccination inequality by designing more effective strategies.
尽管过去几十年来免疫接种覆盖率有所提高,但由于财富状况,埃塞俄比亚仍存在着大量不平等现象。本研究旨在通过分解方法,将儿童疫苗接种流失的社会经济不平等状况的集中指数分解为个体因素的贡献,以评估在埃塞俄比亚偏远和服务不足地区的情况。通过主成分分析,将与妇女家庭生活水平相关的 41 个变量减少到 9 个因素,从而制定了一个财富指数。将这些成分进一步汇总成一个综合得分,并分为五个五分位数(最贫穷、较贫穷、中等、较富裕和最富裕)。疫苗接种流失率计算为接受五联疫苗 1 剂的儿童中未接种五联疫苗 3 剂的比例。使用集中指数来估计儿童疫苗接种流失的社会经济不平等,然后对其进行分解,以检查导致疫苗接种流失社会经济不平等的因素。总体集中指数为-0.179(P<0.01),证实了最贫穷财富阶层的疫苗接种流失集中情况。分解分析表明,财富指数对疫苗接种流失不平等有显著贡献(49.7%)。居住地也解释了不平等的-16.2%。熟练接生和在 kebeles(最低行政政府结构)提供医疗设施也分别显著贡献(33.6%和 12.6%)了不平等的疫苗接种流失。财富指数、居住地、熟练接生和 kebeles 医疗设施的可用性在很大程度上导致了最贫穷财富阶层的疫苗接种流失集中。政策制定者应通过制定更有效的策略来解决疫苗接种不平等问题。