Demare Guillaume, Ramarosaiky Elgiraud, Rampanjato Zavaniarivo, Muller Nadine, Kampmann Beate, Fischer Hanna-Tina
Center for Global Health, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, 10117 Berlin, Germany.
Doctors for Madagascar, Logt II M 98 G Antsakaviro, Antananarivo Appt III-12, Madagascar.
Vaccines (Basel). 2025 Aug 5;13(8):834. doi: 10.3390/vaccines13080834.
Despite growing global momentum to reduce the number of children who never received a dose of any vaccine, i.e., zero-dose (ZD) children, persistent geographic and social inequities continue to undermine progress toward universal immunization coverage. In Madagascar, where routine vaccination coverage remains below 50% in most regions, the non-governmental organization Doctors for Madagascar and public sector partners are implementing the SOAMEVA program: a targeted community-based initiative to identify and reach ZD children in sixteen underserved districts in the country's south. This paper outlines the equity-sensitive evaluation design developed to assess the implementation and impact of SOAMEVA. It presents a forward-looking evaluation framework that integrates both quantitative program monitoring and qualitative community insights. By focusing at the fokontany level-the smallest administrative unit in Madagascar-the evaluation captures small-scale variation in ZD prevalence and program reach, allowing for a detailed analysis of disparities often masked in aggregated data. Importantly, the evaluation includes structured feedback loops with community health workers and caregivers, surfacing local knowledge on barriers to immunization access and program adoption. It also tracks real-time adaptations to implementation strategy across diverse contexts, offering insight into how routine immunization programs can be made more responsive, sustainable, and equitable. We propose eight design principles for conducting equity-sensitive evaluation of immunization programs in similar fragile settings.
尽管全球在减少从未接种过任何疫苗的儿童数量(即零剂量儿童)方面的势头不断增强,但持续存在的地理和社会不平等现象仍在破坏实现普遍免疫覆盖的进程。在马达加斯加,大多数地区的常规疫苗接种覆盖率仍低于50%,非政府组织“马达加斯加医生”和公共部门合作伙伴正在实施SOAMEVA项目:这是一项基于社区的有针对性的倡议,旨在识别并覆盖该国南部16个服务不足地区的零剂量儿童。本文概述了为评估SOAMEVA的实施情况和影响而制定的注重公平的评估设计。它提出了一个前瞻性的评估框架,将定量的项目监测和定性的社区见解结合起来。通过聚焦马达加斯加最小的行政单位——村落层面,该评估捕捉了零剂量患病率和项目覆盖范围的小规模差异,从而能够详细分析汇总数据中常常掩盖的差异。重要的是,该评估包括与社区卫生工作者和照料者的结构化反馈循环,揭示了关于免疫接种获取障碍和项目采用情况的当地知识。它还跟踪了在不同背景下对实施策略的实时调整,深入了解如何使常规免疫项目更具响应性、可持续性和公平性。我们提出了八项设计原则,用于在类似的脆弱环境中对免疫项目进行注重公平的评估。