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Mass measles vaccination in urban Burkina Faso, 1998

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TLDR
The mass campaign enabled a substantial increase in measles vaccine coverage to be made because it reached a high proportion of children who were difficult to reach through routine methods.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact of the National Immunization Days (NIDs) on measles vaccine coverage in Burkina Faso in 1998. METHODS: During the week after the campaign, in which measles vaccine was offered to children aged 9-59 months in six cities regardless of vaccination history, a cluster survey was conducted in Ouagadougou and Bobo Dioulasso, the country’s two largest cities. Interviewers visited the parents of 1267 children aged up to 59 months and examined vaccination cards. We analysed the data using cluster sample methodology for the 1041 children who were aged 9-59 months. FINDINGS: A total of 604 (57%) children had received routine measles vaccination prior to the campaign, and 823 (79%) were vaccinated during the NIDs. Among those who had previously had a routine vaccination, 484 (81%) were revaccinated during the NIDs. Among those not previously vaccinated, 339 (78%) received one dose during the NIDs. After the campaign, 943 (91%) children had received at least one dose of measles vaccine. Better socioeconomic status was associated with a higher chance of having been vaccinated routinely, but it was not associated with NID coverage. CONCLUSION: The mass campaign enabled a substantial increase in measles vaccine coverage to be made because it reached a high proportion of children who were difficult to reach through routine methods.

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Citations
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Effect of mass measles vaccination on numbers of measles cases: A hospital

S Kiguli
TL;DR: Mass measles appeared to significantly reduce the number of measles case admitted to Mulago referral hospital, Kampala, Uganda for a period of two years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Commentary: Accelerated measles control/measles elimination in southern Africa

TL;DR: The dramatic results seen in the short-term are to be expected, particularly since routine measles coverage before the 'catch-up' campaign was sufficiently high to have prolonged the inter-epidemic cycle of measles in South Africa, and the striking reduction in average annual morbidity and mortality gives cause for optimism about the longer-term impact.
Dissertation

Modeling Vaccination Strategies for the Control and Eradication of Childhood Infectious Disease

TL;DR: A general mathematical model is formulated to assess the impact of cVDPVs on prospects for polio eradication and finds that for OPV levels below a certain threshold, the model predicts a small but significant endemic level of the disease, even where standard models predict eradication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Childhood vaccine uptake in Africa: threats, challenges, and opportunities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the factors that have been shown to influence vaccination uptake in Africa and develop effective strategies to address failures and challenges faced with vaccination uptake and hesitancy for it to achieve high vaccination coverage and reduction of vaccine preventable diseases.
References
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Journal Article

Cluster sampling to assess immunization coverage: a review of experience with a simplified sampling method.

TL;DR: The precision of this method, as estimated from the results of both actual and simulated surveys, is considered satisfactory for the requirements of the EPI.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pulse mass measles vaccination across age cohorts

TL;DR: The theoretical results indicate that the advantages and disadvantages of a pulse strategy should be seriously examined in Israel and in countries with similar patterns of measles virus transmission.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measles Elimination in the Americas: Evolving Strategies

TL;DR: The strategy currently used to control measles in most countries has been to immunize each successive birth cohort through the routine health services delivery system, while measles vaccine coverage has increased markedly, significant measles outbreaks have continued to recur.
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