Abstract

BackgroundIndia is home to one in 14 of all chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) cases, meaning that it is important to develop HBV interventions that are applicable in the Indian context. Vaccination is the foremost tool for interrupting the HBV infection cycle. HBV vaccination was not included in India’s government-sponsored expanded immunisation program until 2011, and many children born earlier remain unvaccinated. This study sought to observe the impact of the HOPE Initiative’s school-based intervention to increase vaccination coverage by increasing HBV awareness among students in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh.MethodsAt 430 schools in the administrative areas within and surrounding Lucknow, students viewed an educational documentary film on HBV and completed two questionnaires, one immediately before the screening and the other six weeks later. Both questionnaires asked the same 14 questions, which were organized into five domains: knowledge of the magnitude of the problem of HBV; knowledge of modes of HBV transmission; knowledge of consequences of HBV infection; awareness of HBV; and attitudes regarding HBV. The baseline questionnaire also asked students whether they had been vaccinated against HBV. At two-year follow-up, researchers measured vaccination levels at a subset of 30 intervention schools and six non-intervention schools to further assess the impact of the intervention.ResultsBaseline questionnaires were completed by 11,250 students, and post-intervention questionnaires, by 9698 students. Scores for knowledge about the magnitude of the HBV problem improved from 41% at baseline to 74% at follow-up, and scores for knowledge about modes of transmission, from 38% to 75% (p < 0.05 for both). The baseline HBV vaccination level among students receiving the intervention was 21%. Two years after the intervention, 45% of students (N = 4284) reported being vaccinated at intervention schools compared to 22% (N = 1264) at non-intervention schools.ConclusionsThe observed increases in HBV awareness, knowledge and vaccination levels in this study indicate that school-based interventions can be used to achieve higher vaccination coverage among Indian children. The documentary film was found to be an affordable tool for reaching large audiences. More studies are needed to validate the impact of this intervention and to explore its applicability to other social causes.

Highlights

  • India is home to one in 14 of all chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) cases, meaning that it is important to develop HBV interventions that are applicable in the Indian context

  • A safe, effective and affordable recombinant hepatitis B-DNA vaccine has become the foremost tool for interrupting the infection cycle

  • Other research has found higher Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) prevalence for India, and better data are needed in order to describe the situation with greater certainty [6, 7]

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Summary

Introduction

India is home to one in 14 of all chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) cases, meaning that it is important to develop HBV interventions that are applicable in the Indian context. Vaccination is the foremost tool for interrupting the HBV infection cycle. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major public health problem, with almost 250 million people thought to be chronically infected worldwide [1, 2]. A safe, effective and affordable recombinant hepatitis B-DNA vaccine has become the foremost tool for interrupting the infection cycle. A 2015 analysis of chronic HBV worldwide established India’s HBsAg prevalence at 1.46%. Considerably lower than the estimated global HBsAg prevalence of 3.6%, India’s large population means the country is home to one in 14 of all chronic HBV cases [2]. Other research has found higher HBsAg prevalence for India, and better data are needed in order to describe the situation with greater certainty [6, 7]

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