Abstract
IntroductionExpanded programme on immunizations in resource-limited settings currently measure vaccination coverage defined as the proportion of children aged 12-23 months that have completed their vaccination. However, this indicator does not address the important question of when the scheduled vaccines were administered. We assessed the determinants of timely immunization to help the national EPI program manage vaccine-preventable diseases and impact positively on child survival in Senegal.MethodsVaccination data were obtained from the Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) carried out across the 14 regions in the country. Children were aged between 12-23 months. The assessment of vaccination coverage was done with the health card and/or by the mother’s recall of the vaccination act. For each vaccine, an assessment of delay in age-appropriate vaccination was done following WHO recommendations. Additionally, Kaplan-Meier survival function was used to estimate the proportion vaccinated by age and cox-proportional hazards models were used to examine risk factors for delays.ResultsA total of 2444 living children between 12–23 months of age were included in the analysis. The country vaccination was below the WHO recommended coverage level and, there was a gap in timeliness of children immunization. While BCG vaccine uptake was over 95%, coverage decreased with increasing number of Pentavalent vaccine doses (Penta 1: 95.6%, Penta 2: 93.5%: Penta 3: 89.2%). Median delay for BCG was 1.7 weeks. For polio at birth, the median delay was 5 days; all other vaccine doses had median delays of 2-4 weeks. For Penta 1 and Penta 3, 23.5% and 15.7% were given late respectively. A quarter of measles vaccines were not administered or were scheduled after the recommended age. Vaccinations that were not administered within the recommended age ranges were associated with mothers’ poor education level, multiple siblings, low socio-economic status and living in rural areas.ConclusionA significant delay in receipt of infant vaccines is found in Senegal while vaccine coverage is suboptimal. The national expanded program on immunization should consider measuring age at immunization or using seroepidemiological data to better monitor its impact.
Highlights
Immunization is amongst the most cost effective public health interventions for reducing global childhood morbidity and mortality [1]
Early protection is important for haemophilus influenzae type b and pertussis which remains undiagnosed in most Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs) with higher morbidity during infancy [6,7]
The pentavalent vaccine contains a combination of 5 vaccines in one dose: diphtheria, tetanus toxoid, pertussis, hepatitis B, haemophilus influenza type b vaccine (Hib) and must be administered to children at the same time as the pneumococcal vaccine or the oral polio vaccine (6, 10, 14 weeks)
Summary
Immunization is amongst the most cost effective public health interventions for reducing global childhood morbidity and mortality [1]. In sub-Saharan Africa, immunization data collected from administrative sources are inaccurate due to errors in the denominator (total target population), errors in recording vaccinations at health facilities, and errors in compiling the data on vaccinations to report to higher levels To overcome this shortcoming, many countries obtain childhood immunization data by implementing a vaccination coverage cluster surveys such as Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) or a Multiple Indicator Survey (MICS) [8,9]. The pentavalent vaccine contains a combination of 5 vaccines in one dose: diphtheria, tetanus toxoid, pertussis, hepatitis B, haemophilus influenza type b vaccine (Hib) and must be administered to children at the same time as the pneumococcal vaccine or the oral polio vaccine (6, 10, 14 weeks).
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