Abstract

In 2015, the World Health Organization substantially revised its guidance for vaccination coverage cluster surveys (revisions were finalized in 2018) and has since developed a set of accompanying resources, including definitions for standardized coverage indicators and software (named the Vaccination Coverage Quality Indicators-VCQI) to calculate them.-The current WHO vaccination coverage survey manual was used to design and conduct two nationally representative vaccination coverage surveys in Nigeria-one to assess routine immunization and one to measure post-measles campaign coverage. The primary analysis for both surveys was conducted using VCQI. In this paper, we describe those surveys and highlight some of the analyses that are facilitated by the new resources. In addition to calculating coverage of each vaccine-dose by age group, VCQI analyses provide insight into several indicators of program quality such as crude coverage versus valid doses, vaccination timeliness, missed opportunities for simultaneous vaccination, and, where relevant, vaccination campaign coverage stratified by several parameters, including the number of previous doses received. The VCQI software furnishes several helpful ways to visualize survey results. We show that routine coverage of all vaccines is far below targets in Nigeria and especially low in northeast and northwest zones, which also have highest rates of dropout and missed opportunities for vaccination. Coverage in the 2017 measles campaign was higher and showed less geospatial variation than routine coverage. Nonetheless, substantial improvement in both routine program performance and campaign implementation will be needed to achieve disease control goals.

Highlights

  • Vaccination coverage–the proportion of the target population vaccinated with a given vaccinedose–of the third dose of pentavalent vaccine (containing diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP), H. influenzae type b and hepatitis B vaccines), is used as a proxy indicator to monitor progress towards many global initiatives [1,2,3]

  • Gavi-eligible countries are required to have done a nationally representative coverage survey (which may be multi-purpose such as the Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) or a United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS)) within the last 5 years in order to apply for Gavi support as well as to conduct post campaign coverage surveys following any vaccination campaign (usually termed supplementary immunization activity (SIA)) supported by Gavi [8]

  • We present results from surveys conducted in Nigeria to illustrate many of the standard measures of vaccination coverage promoted in the White Paper for Routine Immunization (RI) and additional indicators for post campaign coverage surveys (PCCS) done after mass vaccination campaigns

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Summary

Introduction

Vaccination coverage–the proportion of the target population vaccinated with a given vaccinedose–of the third dose of pentavalent vaccine (containing diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP), H. influenzae type b and hepatitis B vaccines), is used as a proxy indicator to monitor progress towards many global initiatives [1,2,3]. In 2015, the World Health Organization (WHO) updated its vaccination coverage survey guidance to promote the use of probability sampling with rigorous quality control, use of appropriate analysis and greater use of results to improve program performance (final version published in 2018) [9,10]. The guidance is supported by a set of materials including a list of standard questions and indicators, a tool called Vaccination Coverage Quality Indicators (VCQI) coded to calculate and tabulate most of these indicators [10,11,12], and intensive training through regional workshops and a large distance-based learning program in English and French, which is reaching several hundred participants around the world [13,14,15,16]. VCQI is an open source collection of analytical programs, currently written in Stata for the analysis and visualisation of data collected from vaccination coverage surveys

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