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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Mass measles vaccination in urban Burkina Faso, 1998

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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Family and community practices that promote child survival growth and development. A review of the evidence.

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TL;DR: Specific factors associated with immunization status in Nouna health district are identified in order to advance improved intervention strategies in this district and in those with similar environmental and social contexts.
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Interventions aimed at communities to inform and/or educate about early childhood vaccination.

TL;DR: Low certainty evidence that interventions aimed at communities to inform and educate about childhood vaccination may improve knowledge of vaccines or vaccine-preventable diseases among intervention participants is shown.
References
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Mass vaccination programs in developing countries.

W H Foege, +1 more
TL;DR: Improvements in vaccine potency offer the possibility that single injections of vaccines such as tetanus toxoid may result in adequate immunity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Health cards, maternal reports and the measurement of immunization coverage: the example of Guatemala.

TL;DR: The implications of alternative methods of measuring immunization coverage rates in Guatemala are explored, using data from the 1987 Encuesta Nacional de Salud Materno Infantil, and the dangers of making inferences about levels and trends in coverage from cross-sectional data are considered.
Journal Article

Estimating vaccination coverage: routine information or sample survey?

TL;DR: Routinely collected figures of the number of vaccinations were used to calculate coverage levels for different health unit catchment areas within the district, which suggested under-enumeration at the 1982 census was probably as high as a third and was a particular problem among children aged under 1 year.
Journal Article

Evaluation of a mass measles immunisation campaign in a rapidly growing peri-urban area.

TL;DR: A mass measles immunisation campaign, with a target coverage rate of 85-90%, was launched in Khayelitsha, a rapidly growing urban township in the Cape Town area and failure to reach the targeted rate is attributed to the influx rate, campaign design and implementation, and factors related to child and career mobility.
Journal Article

An evaluation of the national measles vaccination campaign in the new shanty areas of Khayelitsha.

TL;DR: A local component of the national measles vaccination campaign was evaluated in an area undergoing rapid urbanisation near Cape Town, and the value of campaigns in controlling measles, as well as the role of a comprehensive health care service are discussed.
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